The B3TA Detective Agency
Universalpsykopath tugs our coat and says: Tell us about your feats of deduction and the little mysteries you've solved. Alternatively, tell us about the simple, everyday things that mystified you for far too long.
( , Thu 13 Oct 2011, 12:52)
Universalpsykopath tugs our coat and says: Tell us about your feats of deduction and the little mysteries you've solved. Alternatively, tell us about the simple, everyday things that mystified you for far too long.
( , Thu 13 Oct 2011, 12:52)
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But they're not red, green and yellow.
They're cyan (blue-greeny), magenta (pinky-purple) and yellow. The first two look quite a lot different from blue and red.
( , Tue 18 Oct 2011, 12:31, 1 reply)
They're cyan (blue-greeny), magenta (pinky-purple) and yellow. The first two look quite a lot different from blue and red.
( , Tue 18 Oct 2011, 12:31, 1 reply)
And, on top of that,
different people perceive different colours differently.
Obviously.
( , Tue 18 Oct 2011, 22:18, closed)
different people perceive different colours differently.
Obviously.
( , Tue 18 Oct 2011, 22:18, closed)
erm.. no only some
There was a horizon prog on this very subject, evolutionary evidence says blue yellow complementaries are hard wired, and evoke similar responses in the same brain areas, the later receptors do not provide exactly the same brain stimuli in different people. So yes to some colours and we have no way of confidently knowing for the others
( , Wed 19 Oct 2011, 15:17, closed)
There was a horizon prog on this very subject, evolutionary evidence says blue yellow complementaries are hard wired, and evoke similar responses in the same brain areas, the later receptors do not provide exactly the same brain stimuli in different people. So yes to some colours and we have no way of confidently knowing for the others
( , Wed 19 Oct 2011, 15:17, closed)
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