Selective color correction is a technique used by high‑end scanners and separation programs to change the amount of process colors in each of the primary color components in an image. You can modify the amount of a process color in any primary color selectively—without affecting the other primary colors. For example, you can use selective color correction to dramatically decrease the cyan in the green component of an image while leaving the cyan in the blue component unaltered.
Even though Selective Color uses CMYK colors to correct an image, you can use it on RGB images.