3. More than meets the eye: hyperspectral imaging
How many colours we see is limited by our eye, which contains only three types of colour sensors. Using advanced techniques, vision scientists can take images of this “invisible” information and make it visible.
With Sérgio Nascimento.
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4. Panel discussion: #TheDress – What do we know?
In early 2015, an image of a dress polarised the internet: Some people saw it as black-blue, and some as white-gold. Three years on, we revisit the dress and discuss how vision science can explain this phenomenon.
With Manuel Spitschan, Anya Hurlbert, Karl Gegenfurtner and David Brainard.
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ICVS SUMMER SCHOOL
Problem viewing the video? Try adjusting your browser's security settings. You can also watch it by going to YouTube here.
On these pages, we present videos which have been produced with the support of ICVS.
A SPLASH OF COLOUR
In this video series, we explore human colour vision and colour perception through the lens of neuroscientists, psychologists, and physicists working in the field. We examine how light hitting the back surface of our eye leads to signals in the cones and rods and how these can be measured using modern non-invasive techniques, how spectral imaging can allow us to "see" what the human eye cannot, and also examine what we learned from #TheDress.
Produced by Dr. Manuel Spitschan, Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford (2018). Funded by OSA Color Technical Group, International Colour Vision Society (ICVS), Colour Group (GB) & Oxford Vision Group (OxVis).
1. Seeing Neurons inside the living human eye
2. Neurons code the colours we see
3. More than meets the eye - hyperspectral imaging
4. Panel discussion: #TheDress. What do we know?
ICVS SUMMER SCHOOL
Click here to see a promo video for the ICVS summer school, last held in August 2025 in Oxford, UK. We plan to hold the next in-person summer school in 2027.
How our logo was designed
We have Steve Shevell to thank for designing our logo.
The words "INTERNATIONAL" and "COLOUR" are in fact drawn in the same colour; whilst the words "VISION" and "SOCIETY" are drawn in a second colour. Adding the stripes induces a colour shift as a result of cortical receptive field organization (Monnier & Shevell, Nature Neuroscience, 2003).
To remove the inducing pattern of stripes, simply hover your cursor over the logo below. The actual colours the letters are drawn in do not change when you do this.

