The Eye of the Beholder: How Lighting Affects Our Color Perception

We did this for several rounds in different types of lighting. I stared at the gray background for a few minutes in between rounds to reset my eyes. I felt pressure to choose a color match quickly. It was like when the eye doctor asks “A” or “B” or “1” or “2” during your eye exam. But it was also a fun challenge.

Interestingly, Yoshi explained that people who live in colder climates generally prefer warmer-colored lighting. People who live in warmer climates prefer cooler-colored lighting. I guess everything is a balance.

Published: Monday, July 31, 2023 – 12:02

A mirror reflects Yoshi Ohno, seated, and Jane Li, standing, as they view a computer screen showing lighting data.
NIST researchers Yoshi Ohno and Jane Li demonstrate different types of lighting in their lab on NIST’s campus in Gaithersburg, Maryland. Credit: R. Wilson/NIST

The science of color

On the ceiling, the lab features a lighting fixture that can be changed with the press of a button on a remote. The room simulates how lighting would look in a typical living room.

On a recent Friday afternoon, I visited the lighting lab at NIST’s campus in Gaithersburg, Maryland. Yoshi started by taking me on a tour of the space. With fluffy rugs and colorful artwork on the walls, it’s much nicer than any other government office I’ve worked in or visited.

First published June 28, 2023, on NIST’s Taking Measure blog.

Eyes on the colorful prize

The room was dark so as not to interfere with my vision. I sat in a chair in front of a viewing booth divided in half. I had to put my nose directly up against the cardboard center line of the booth (while wearing a mask for cleanliness). The two sides of the booth had the same background color (gray) but different lighting levels.

We also all interpret colors a little differently, even with the same lighting.

The challenge, Yoshi explained, is that the CRI doesn’t match up to what people perceive.

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He clicked the remote again, and a pleasant, orange hue began to illuminate the room. He had me look at my face in the mirror. Much better. (As a nearly middle-aged person with an increasingly complex skin-care routine as I age, I’m happy this scientific advancement in lighting exists!)

NIST researchers Yoshi Ohno and Jane Li study how LED lights affect our perception of color. Their research could someday inspire new international standards for the color quality of the lighting we use every day.

I’m glad to know I may play a very small part in updating lighting standards to fit our modern preferences and today’s lighting technology.

After a period of adaptation, the brightness I perceived on the two sides gradually converged. After adapting my eyes to the gray background, Jane placed one square sample of a certain color on the side of the booth with less light. The other side had more light, and she placed a board with 20 similar color samples there. I had less than 10 seconds to identify the closest match from the 20 samples. The time limit prevented my eyes from adapting to the sample color other than gray. She switched colors, and we started again.

The second round was easier. We used just one side of the booth, and Jane handed me the same square and coordinating color card with 20 shades of that color. I had to match them up without a time limit. This was much more enjoyable—like matching paint colors to a sample at the home improvement store. I felt like my answers were closer to “right” than in the speed round.

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Remember the social media controversy over the color of a dress that everyone seemed to have a different opinion on? That’s a lighthearted example of how illumination can affect the things we see. But this is serious science. How our eyes see color under different conditions can affect such things as how health professionals read medical imaging scans.

Jane will use the results of the study to create statistical models that could influence future international standards for lighting. Organizations such as the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) and the International Commission on Illumination (CIE) publish standards on everything from the color range of white light that is acceptable for your home to the methods of evaluating color rendering (like CRI) that are suitable for various lighting uses.

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Jane Li poses at her desk with color samples in the background.
NIST postdoctoral researcher Jane Li will use the results of the color perception study to create statistical models that could influence future international standards for lighting. Credit: R. Wilson/NIST

Setting the standard for modern lighting

Yoshi Ohno speaks to Megan King in a small room with a specialized ceiling light fixture showing different colors of light.
NIST researcher Yoshi Ohno’s lab has different types of lighting so he can study how our eyes perceive color in various lighting conditions. Credit: R. Wilson/NIST

I’m one of 20 adults who will do the same experiment over the course of the month. I asked Jane how they figure out the demographic breakdown of their participants. She said that in her previous research, she found no real difference in color perception based on gender. Some other studies have shown women can outperform men in distinguishing subtle color differences.

Jane then showed me to the booth where my color perception would be put to the test. First, I had to pass a test of my color vision and an additional test to check that the blue light filter on my glasses wouldn’t affect my color vision. I passed both with, um, flying colors.

The way in which colors of objects appear under a particular light is called color rendering.

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This has been the focus of Yoshi’s research—understanding the gap between the standards and people’s perception, and updating those international standards to match what people see.

Jane explained that there is some difference in color perception based on age, and the international standard for lighting is based on the eyes of a 32-year-old. Although I’m a bit older than that at 39, I’m still close enough to the target demographic to offer useful data.

Megan King looks into a lighting test booth at a grid of orange-hued color samples.
I had just a few seconds to match up colors in an experiment to test my color perception under different lighting conditions. Credit: R. Wilson/NIST

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When Yoshi showed me my face under that harsh lighting, that was a 95 on the CRI. The much more flattering lighting was only a 70 on the CRI. This is not necessarily surprising because the standard was set 50 years ago before LED lighting was invented.

I’m not just here for a tour, though. I’ve signed up to participate in an experiment on how different types of lighting conditions affect our perception of colors. NIST employees, interns, and even family and friends of our employees sign up to participate. The only requirement is to be an adult with normal color vision (glasses or contacts are fine).

NIST’s research is probably already reflected in your home or workplace’s lights. This research may help illuminate everyone’s path toward better lighting in the years to come.

I told Jane that yellow was a particularly challenging color for me to match. The yellows all looked like the tiniest bit of difference in shades of a highlighter to me. That may be one way my color perception is different from others’.

Yoshi explained that warm colors (orangish and reddish colors) and cool colors (bluish or greenish colors) create different lighting effects. It’s especially pronounced when you look at skin.