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Dearest Peeps Of Klevur Knowing Stuff,
How do I know that my eyes perceive colours exactly the same as yours ? For all i know your orange might be my green ?
Do both eyes see colours exactly the same ?
Does the colour of eyes have any effect on colour perception ?
Will I still perceive colours the same when I'm 80 like i do now ?
*What's your favourite colour ? (US translation service: "colour" = "color" sheesh !!)
Why do we prefer certain colours over another ?
Quote from: neilep on 16/12/2019 14:53:45Dearest Peeps Of Klevur Knowing Stuff,Peeps with peepers is more like it.QuoteHow do I know that my eyes perceive colours exactly the same as yours ? For all i know your orange might be my green ?You don't. No way to compare subjective experience, but there are some people that see more colour than typical, sort of the opposite of being colour blind. They see patterns in flowers that might appear white to me. They get offended that the crayon box never seems to be anywhere near complete.Squirrels see yellow. Humans do not, and the banana appears the same colour as an object that emits only red and green light. Squirrels could tell the two apart effortlessly, not because they see better, but because they see actual yellow.QuoteDo both eyes see colours exactly the same ?I think one would notice if otherwise, so barring health issues, yes.QuoteDoes the colour of eyes have any effect on colour perception ?NoQuoteWill I still perceive colours the same when I'm 80 like i do now ?Again, barring health issues, yes. I've had cataracts, so my world sort of faded to foggy white. My colours were not off, but I needed 3cm high font to read anything. All fixed now. My mother lost most of here colour vision and was amazed when it was restored. All the vivid hues and such that she'd forgotten about.Quote*What's your favourite colour ? (US translation service: "colour" = "color" sheesh !!)Boring if there's only one. The prior owners of my house liked gold. All the drapes, carpets, hardware, and even the cars. Sheesh indeed...QuoteWhy do we prefer certain colours over another ?I don't, so don't know.
On a science blog, we are likely to consider colour in terms of physics (wavelength of light) or biology (spectral sensitivity of cone cells).But colour processing and classification occurs deeper in the brain.I understand from a school teacher that children of Vietnamese background are likely to regard blue as just another shade of green, rather than a colour in its own right. So in this language context, blue is not a really colour.This may be one reason why most women who were genetically tetrachromats could not label colours differently - they had always been told that they were all "red".Colour perception is a psycho-linguistic construct (to coin a phrase...)See: http://theconversation.com/languages-dont-all-have-the-same-number-of-terms-for-colors-scientists-have-a-new-theory-why-84117
For all i know your orange might be my green ?