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Have a look at the perceptually uniform sequential colormaps in OpenCV, that are:

  • magma
  • inferno
  • plasma
  • viridis
  • cividis
  • twilight / twilight shifted (circular colormap)

They are similar to the Matplotlib ones.

More information about magma, inferno, plasma and viridis colormaps can be found here.

Cividis comes from the following paper: Optimizing colormaps with consideration forcolor vision deficiency to enable accurateinterpretation of scientific data.

This page shows how viridis and magma can be seen by the various forms of colorblindness (Deuteranopia, Protanopia, Tritanopia).

Have a look at the perceptually uniform sequential colormaps in OpenCV, that are:

  • magma
  • inferno
  • plasma
  • viridis
  • cividis
  • twilight / twilight shifted (circular colormap)

They are similar to the Matplotlib ones.

More information about magma, inferno, plasma and viridis colormaps can be found here.

Cividis comes from the following paper: Optimizing colormaps with consideration forcolor for color vision deficiency to enable accurateinterpretation accurate interpretation of scientific data.

This page shows how viridis and magma can be seen by the various forms of colorblindness (Deuteranopia, Protanopia, Tritanopia).

Have a look at the perceptually uniform sequential colormaps in OpenCV, OpenCV (available with OpenCV >= 3.4.6 and OpenCV >= 4.1.0), that are:

  • magma
  • inferno
  • plasma
  • viridis
  • cividis
  • twilight / twilight shifted (circular colormap)

They are similar to the Matplotlib ones.

More information about magma, inferno, plasma and viridis colormaps can be found here.

Cividis comes from the following paper: Optimizing colormaps with consideration for color vision deficiency to enable accurate interpretation of scientific data.

This page shows how viridis and magma can be seen by the various forms of colorblindness (Deuteranopia, Protanopia, Tritanopia).