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(, Sun 1 Apr 2001, 1:00)
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that the absorption spectra will remain constant regardless of the level of light, and this is what gives us our perception of colour. And also, I still think colour and reflectivity are different - shape plays an important role, in that things that aren't perfectly flat won't seem as reflective even though the substance they are made of is exactly the same.
(, Thu 8 Oct 2009, 15:41, 1 reply, 16 years ago)
a shiny sphere that's as shiny as a shiny flat thing will look just as shiny.
Tell you what, let's set up an experiment. One that involves the risk of potential blindness, though we'll hide that from the ethics commitee. We can probably get away with a relatively small sample size since its a low level visual study but we can use a non-parametric test in addition to means analysis. I recommend a two-alternative forced choice procedure in conjunction with a staircase method to give us a threshold estimate of shininess. I also recommend poking particpants in the eye with a stick if they don't give me the results I want.
(, Thu 8 Oct 2009, 15:51, Reply)
One eye at a time, or should we make the study double-blind?
*ashames*
(, Thu 8 Oct 2009, 16:01, Reply)
If I hadn't said it Vipros would have, and then he'd have been all smug about it.
(, Thu 8 Oct 2009, 16:32, Reply)
I'm not a scientist, I'm an engineer. I don't know about experiments.
(, Thu 8 Oct 2009, 16:47, Reply)
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