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We See IT Differently


Blue or white dress? Why we see colors differently

In viral debate over dress' true color, scientists explain why our brains see objects differently. Joseph Rizzo, David Glendenning Cogan ...

This is why we see colors differently - Telegraph - Telegrafi

The difference may be due to different variations in the number of photoreceptors in the retina, called cones, which perceive the color blue.

Black and Blue or White and Gold? How Your Brain Sees 'the Dress'

... seeing the dress differently. ... In other words, our individual sensitivity to the blue background lighting of the photo is changing how we see ...

4 Simple Concepts Proving that We All See Things Differently

The simple answer is no, we don't. Based on our physicality, our literal location, and other mitigating factors we all see things differently.

The Color Of The Dress According To Science - YouTube

... i-going-insane-its-definitely-blue#.duqo2vvzr GET MORE BUZZFEED: www.buzzfeed.com www.buzzfeed.com/video www.buzzfeed.com/videoteam www ...

Why We Don't See the Same Reality - Core77

What two people see is truly different and tied at a neural level to their own personal experiences.

Exploring Perception: Seeing Colors Differently - TikTok

We delve into the theory of people seeing colors differently. Can love truly see no color? Explore the concept of new colors and whether our perception aligns ...

Seeing things differently: The secret life of our eyes

... we look at something, it's a one-off experience.” — Prof. Ehud Ahissar. The results indicated that the interactions between eye movements and ...

The 12 best optical illusions that went viral and stumped the internet

Depending on whether your brain saw the dress more in shadow or more in a direct light, you'd see the colors differently. These strawberries ...

We See Things Differently, by Bruce Sterling - Revolution SF

The land of nuclear-powered global navies, with cannon that fired shells as large as cars. They have forgotten that they used to shoot us, shell us, insult us, ...

The science behind the dress colour illusion | Internet | The Guardian

... look blue and black under different conditions.” ... Human beings evolved to see in daylight, but daylight changes the colour of everything we see ...

What Colors Do Bees See? And How Do We Know? - NC State News

A bee rests in a yellow flower. Bees see different colors than humans, which Flowers have beautiful patterns invisible to the human eye, but eye ...

Why Are People Seeing Different Colors In That Damn Dress?

You can take our poll here. So far, about three-quarters of respondents see white and gold. But why are people seeing such wildly different ...

Is It Blue And Black or White And Gold? The Dress Illusion Explained

Because even if we see the same image, we can perceive it differently. In the Dress, what's probably happening is that discounting ...

What Is Color, and How Do We See Color?

Once light hits your eyes, the lens of your eye focuses it onto those light-sensitive cells, rods, and cones, each of which picks up different ...

Why do people see the same colours differently? - BBC Science Focus

Usually because they have more or fewer types of cone cells, the wavelength sensitive photoreceptors in the retina at the back of their eyes.

The World We See - Part 4: "The Dress" Will Still Fool You

Last month I delved into the biology of cones, which respond to different colors of light by “firing” an electrochemical signal towards the ...

Do You See What I See? - Wonderopolis

Today's Wonder of the Day was inspired by Hailie from Riverdale, MI. Hailie Wonders, “Do people see colors different then other people?” Thanks for WONDERing ...

That dress isn't blue or gold because color doesn't exist | PBS News

And how in the world can two people see one color so differently? (We'll get back to that.) But there's a third, more philosophical, question at ...

Do We All See Colours Differently? - YouTube

This is a video about how we all see colours. It's amazing how much our perception of colour is shaped by our language, and how different it ...


Ten Things Every Child with Autism Wishes You Knew

Book by Ellen Notbohm

A Young Girl's Diary

Book by Sigmund Freud