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The ''Human Visual System Model'', often referred to as the Human Visual System (HVS), is used by [[image processing]], [[video processing]] and [[Computer vision]] experts to deal with biological and psychological processes that are not yet fully understood. The model is used to simplify the behaviours of what is a very complex system. As our knowledge of the [[Visual system | true Human Visual System]] improves, the model is updated.▼
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'''Psychovisual''' study is the study of the psychology of vision.
Several HVS features are derived from avatisms, throwbacks to nature when we needed to defend ourselves or hunt for food. We often see demonstrations of HVS features when we are looking at optical illusions.▼
The human visual system model can produce desired effects in perception and vision. Examples of using an HVS model include [[color television]], [[lossy compression]], and [[Cathode-ray tube]] (CRT) television.
Originally, it was thought that color television required too high a bandwidth for the then available technology. Then it was noticed that the color resolution of the HVS was much lower than the brightness resolution; this allowed color to be squeezed into the signal by [[chroma subsampling]].
Another example is lossy image compression, like [[JPEG]]. Our HVS model says we cannot see high frequency detail, so in JPEG we can quantize these components without a perceptible loss of quality. Similar concepts are applied in [[Data compression#Lossy audio compression|audio compression]], where sound frequencies inaudible to humans are band-stop filtered.
▲Several HVS features are derived from
==Block diagram of HVS==
{{Empty section|date=February 2018}}
==Assumptions about the HVS==
* [[Low
* Lack of
* Motion sensitivity
** More sensitive
** Stronger than texture sensitivity, e.g. viewing a
* Texture stronger
* Integral Face recognition (babies smile at faces)
** [[Hollow-face illusion|Depth inverted face looks normal]] (facial features overrule depth information)
*** Upside down face with inverted mouth and eyes looks normal<ref>[http://www.moillusions.com/2006/09/margaret-thatcher-illusion.html Margaret Thatcher Illusion – Mighty Optical Illusions<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
==Examples of
* [[Flicker fusion threshold|Flicker frequency of film and television using persistence of vision to fool viewer into seeing a continuous image]]
* Colour television (chrominance at half resolution of luminance)▼
* [[Interlaced video|Interlaced television]] painting half images to give the impression of a higher flicker frequency
* Image compression (higher frequencies more harshly quantised)▼
▲*
* [[Motion estimation]] (use luminance and ignore colour)▼
* [[Watermark]]ing and [[Steganography]]
==See also==
* [[Psychoacoustics]]
* [[Visual system]]
* [[Visual perception]]
* [[Depth perception]]
==References==
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Image processing|Computer vision]]
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