Home FAQ Lyyn Products How does the Lyyn T38 VET work in layman's terms?

Ac-cess Products

Events Calendar

<<  April 2010  >>
 Sun  Mon  Tue  Wed  Thu  Fri  Sat 
      1  2  3
  4  5  6  7  8  910
11121314151617
18192021222324
252627282930 

Staff Login Only



How does the Lyyn T38 VET work in layman's terms? PDF Print E-mail
Written by gina.mc   
Friday, 29 May 2009 12:15
When we look at something, signals from red-sensitive, blue-sensitive and green-sensitive receptors in the eyes retina travel to centres in the brain, where we interpret them, understand them, "see" them; hopefully recognize a pattern or a shape.  What we call colour is a particular balance of signals from the red, green and blue receptors.  In an equal signal mixture, we only see shades of white, grey or black, and no colour.

The eye and brain can discern only about two dozen shades of grey.  But, if there is even the slightest hint of unbalance in the R, G B in-signals, the eye and brain can separate thousands of colour shades and intensities.  Thus colour, if at all existent in a picture, is a powerful descriptor that often simplifies object identification and extraction from a scene.

The LYYN™ procedure extracts even the faintest traces of colour in a picture, perhaps invisible to the un-aided eye, and processes them so the brain can thus better understand what it perceives.

This is where the LYYN™ process is better than a pure contrast (greyness) system....it helps the human brain use its best strength...colour separation and object identification even in an apparently "grey" scene.
Last Updated on Monday, 22 June 2009 16:56
 
 

Cygnus Products

Starfish Products

Mailing List - Subcribe

Polls

How did you locate our website?
 

Advertisement

Featured Links:
ROVworld.com
ROV Jobs, ROV Employment, ROV News, ROV Forum!