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{{further|Color perception}}
[[Color]] originates in the mind of the observer;
However, the XYZ color model presupposes specific viewing conditions (such as the retinal locus of stimulation, the luminance level of the light that meets the eye, the background behind the observed object, and the luminance level of the surrounding light). Only if all these conditions stay constant will two identical stimuli with thereby identical XYZ [[CIE 1931 color space#Tristimulus values|tristimulus]] values create an identical '''color appearance''' for a human observer. If some conditions change in one case, two identical stimuli with thereby identical XYZ tristimulus values will create {{em|different}} color appearances (and vice versa: two different stimuli with thereby different XYZ tristimulus values might create an {{em|identical}} color appearance).
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Several effects change the perception of hue by a human observer:
* '''[[Bezold–Brücke shift|Bezold–Brücke hue shift]]:''' The hue of
* '''[[Abney effect]]:''' The hue of monochromatic light changes with the addition of white light (which would be expected color-neutral).
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===CIECAM97s===
After starting the evolution of color appearance models with [[#CIELAB|CIELAB]], in 1997, the CIE wanted to follow up
===IPT===
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