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General Discussion >> General Board >> • PeRcEpTiOn •
http://www.ozpolitic.com/forum/YaBB.pl?num=1644272886

Message started by Lisa Jones on Feb 8th, 2022 at 8:28am

Title: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Lisa Jones on Feb 8th, 2022 at 8:28am
What colour shoes and shoe laces do you see?
A9EC6518-68B8-49D4-B2AA-E27FE69CCE84.jpeg (233 KB | 12 )

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Lisa Jones on Feb 8th, 2022 at 8:29am
I see grey sneakers with pastel green laces.

I bet some of you will totally disagree. Some of you might even say I'm lying about the colours I've stated in this post.

Yet I'm telling you the truth....the truth as I am able to perceive it.

Note : Might be an idea to save the pic and share this exercise with family, friends and colleagues. There's a lot we can learn from a shoe. Watch this topic.


Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Ye Grappler on Feb 8th, 2022 at 9:56am
“If the doors of perception were cleansed every thing would appear to man as it is, Infinite. For man has closed himself up, till he sees all things thro' narrow chinks of his cavern.”  - William Blake.

I see grey with turquoise laces - the grey has a sort of pink undertone, but that's probably the camera.  Sometimes I get the best sunsets etc, but my tablet simply will not encompass the colours - so frustrating.

We're gonna need a better camera.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Lisa Jones on Feb 8th, 2022 at 10:11am

Grappler Racist Filth wrote on Feb 8th, 2022 at 9:56am:
“If the doors of perception were cleansed every thing would appear to man as it is, Infinite. For man has closed himself up, till he sees all things thro' narrow chinks of his cavern.”  - William Blake.

I see grey with turquoise laces - the grey has a sort of pink undertone, but that's probably the camera.  Sometimes I get the best sunsets etc, but my tablet simply will not encompass the colours - so frustrating.

We're gonna need a better camera.


Interesting answer.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by UnSubRocky on Feb 8th, 2022 at 5:27pm
It is supposedly red shoes with white laces. Just held under a different light.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Ye Grappler on Feb 8th, 2022 at 5:39pm
"Red shoes with turquoise laces,
A polka dot vest and man oh man,
Red shoes and turquoise laces,
And a big Panama with a purple hat band.."

So if it's held under a different light it changes the colour to the eye...

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Lisa Jones on Feb 8th, 2022 at 5:49pm
Rocky what colours do you see right now when you look at that shoe?

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Gordon on Feb 8th, 2022 at 5:52pm

Grappler Racist Filth wrote on Feb 8th, 2022 at 9:56am:
“If the doors of perception were cleansed every thing would appear to man as it is, Infinite. For man has closed himself up, till he sees all things thro' narrow chinks of his cavern.”  - William Blake.

I see grey with turquoise laces - the grey has a sort of pink undertone, but that's probably the camera.  Sometimes I get the best sunsets etc, but my tablet simply will not encompass the colours - so frustrating.

We're gonna need a better camera.


Colour clipping. What camera, something better than a phone?

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Lisa Jones on Feb 8th, 2022 at 5:56pm

Gordon wrote on Feb 8th, 2022 at 5:52pm:

Grappler Racist Filth wrote on Feb 8th, 2022 at 9:56am:
“If the doors of perception were cleansed every thing would appear to man as it is, Infinite. For man has closed himself up, till he sees all things thro' narrow chinks of his cavern.”  - William Blake.

I see grey with turquoise laces - the grey has a sort of pink undertone, but that's probably the camera.  Sometimes I get the best sunsets etc, but my tablet simply will not encompass the colours - so frustrating.

We're gonna need a better camera.


Colour clipping. What camera, something better than a phone?


Gordon forget the camera. That's irrelevant.

The question is this : right now looking at that pic...what colours do your eyes see?

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Gordon on Feb 8th, 2022 at 5:57pm
It's a pastel turquoise....said by someone who's done pro video editing ;)

Greens often do get perceived differently due to  colourblindness, but more often than not people just miss describe the colour they see.

https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-d&q=pastel+turquoise

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Lisa Jones on Feb 8th, 2022 at 6:00pm

Gordon wrote on Feb 8th, 2022 at 5:57pm:
It's a pastel turquoise....said by someone who's done pro video editing ;)

Greens often do get perceived differently due to  colourblindness, but more often than not people just miss describe the colour they see.

https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-d&q=pastel+turquoise


Gordy.....just tell me what colour the shoe is and what colour the laces are when your eye balls make contact with the pic in the Opening Post.


Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Gordon on Feb 8th, 2022 at 6:16pm

Lisa Jones wrote on Feb 8th, 2022 at 6:00pm:

Gordon wrote on Feb 8th, 2022 at 5:57pm:
It's a pastel turquoise....said by someone who's done pro video editing ;)

Greens often do get perceived differently due to  colourblindness, but more often than not people just miss describe the colour they see.

https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-d&q=pastel+turquoise


Gordy.....just tell me what colour the shoe is and what colour the laces are when your eye balls make contact with the pic in the Opening Post.


Hope you're happy, you made me walk downstairs to my computer with the big ass IPS monitor.

When I glance at it, the shoe looks grey and the laces, trim look like a shade of green in pastel.

If I stare at it, it looks less green and shifts a bit to pink.
As someone who's done editing, I know why ;)

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by JaSin. on Feb 8th, 2022 at 6:29pm
I only see a shoe, not shoes.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Mustapha_Khunt on Feb 8th, 2022 at 7:16pm

Lisa Jones wrote on Feb 8th, 2022 at 8:28am:
What colour shoes and shoe laces do you see?


I see a cheap pair of plimsols no civilised lady would post on an anonymous website, dear, never mind wear.

But that's just me.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Laugh till you cry on Feb 8th, 2022 at 7:32pm
I see a suitable companion for Valkie/Vickie on his rock fishing expeditions.

Lisa Jones has plenty of time on her hands and she values her time as zero.

If Ozpolitic was a dating site Lisa and Valkie/Vickie would be a perfect match.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Valkie on Feb 8th, 2022 at 7:42pm
Groggy has no need for shoes.

He never leaves his mothers basement.

When are yo leaving the forum like you promised Groggy?

It's been years and still you and your socks continue to plague the forum.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Jim Lahey on Feb 8th, 2022 at 7:48pm

Valkie wrote on Feb 8th, 2022 at 7:42pm:
Groggy has no need for shoes.

He never leaves his mothers basement.

When are yo leaving the forum like you promised Groggy?

It's been years and still you and your socks continue to plague the forum.


Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Lisa Jones on Feb 8th, 2022 at 9:13pm

Gordon wrote on Feb 8th, 2022 at 6:16pm:

Lisa Jones wrote on Feb 8th, 2022 at 6:00pm:

Gordon wrote on Feb 8th, 2022 at 5:57pm:
It's a pastel turquoise....said by someone who's done pro video editing ;)

Greens often do get perceived differently due to  colourblindness, but more often than not people just miss describe the colour they see.

https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-d&q=pastel+turquoise


Gordy.....just tell me what colour the shoe is and what colour the laces are when your eye balls make contact with the pic in the Opening Post.


Hope you're happy, you made me walk downstairs to my computer with the big ass IPS monitor.

When I glance at it, the shoe looks grey and the laces, trim look like a shade of green in pastel.

If I stare at it, it looks less green and shifts a bit to pink.
As someone who's done editing, I know why ;)


Ok that's interesting.

I only see grey shoes with pastel green laces.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Lisa Jones on Feb 8th, 2022 at 9:15pm
Anyone else ready to post what colour this shoe is and what colour the laces are?



B3127FE0-12B4-4EA9-8765-D359460FFC16.jpeg (233 KB | 7 )

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Lisa Jones on Feb 8th, 2022 at 9:17pm

Jasin wrote on Feb 8th, 2022 at 6:29pm:
I only see a shoe, not shoes.


Ok but what colour is the shoe and what colour is the shoe lace?

It's not a trick question. Just look at the pic and right down the colours your eyes see.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Mustapha_Khunt on Feb 8th, 2022 at 9:51pm

Laugh till you cry wrote on Feb 8th, 2022 at 7:32pm:
I see a suitable companion for Valkie/Vickie on his rock fishing expeditions.

Lisa Jones has plenty of time on her hands and she values her time as zero.

If Ozpolitic was a dating site Lisa and Valkie/Vickie would be a perfect match.


And if they take Grappler yabbying, they'll have a perfect snatch, no?

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Mustapha_Khunt on Feb 8th, 2022 at 9:54pm

Lisa Jones wrote on Feb 8th, 2022 at 9:13pm:

Gordon wrote on Feb 8th, 2022 at 6:16pm:

Lisa Jones wrote on Feb 8th, 2022 at 6:00pm:

Gordon wrote on Feb 8th, 2022 at 5:57pm:
It's a pastel turquoise....said by someone who's done pro video editing ;)

Greens often do get perceived differently due to  colourblindness, but more often than not people just miss describe the colour they see.

https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-d&q=pastel+turquoise


Gordy.....just tell me what colour the shoe is and what colour the laces are when your eye balls make contact with the pic in the Opening Post.


Hope you're happy, you made me walk downstairs to my computer with the big ass IPS monitor.

When I glance at it, the shoe looks grey and the laces, trim look like a shade of green in pastel.

If I stare at it, it looks less green and shifts a bit to pink.
As someone who's done editing, I know why ;)


Ok that's interesting.

I only see grey shoes with pastel green laces.


True, but Gordon wanted to raise his monitor with the big bottom.

Bottoms up, dear. Legs in the air, no?

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Ye Grappler on Feb 8th, 2022 at 10:02pm

Big Donger wrote on Feb 8th, 2022 at 9:51pm:

Laugh till you cry wrote on Feb 8th, 2022 at 7:32pm:
I see a suitable companion for Valkie/Vickie on his rock fishing expeditions.

Lisa Jones has plenty of time on her hands and she values her time as zero.

If Ozpolitic was a dating site Lisa and Valkie/Vickie would be a perfect match.


And if they take Grappler yabbying, they'll have a perfect snatch, no?


Nah - I send my black servitors - every man should have some - to bring back the yabbies and the crabs and the lobsters and catch the fish.  They are well rewarded with a bite of sow belly and water melon...

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Baronvonrort on Feb 8th, 2022 at 10:07pm
Looks like a shade of pink with white laces

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Dnarever on Feb 8th, 2022 at 10:14pm
I would be happy with pastel green but I originally was leaning towards Aqua but maybe a little closer to turquoise or in between. A tad too blue to be aquamarine but not too far away either.

What disease makes a hand go that colour ?

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Lisa Jones on Feb 8th, 2022 at 10:47pm
Interesting replies.

Anyone else care to take a look at the shoe and tell me what colour it is and what colour the laces are?

Come on.....jump in quickly with the colours your eyes see.


24FEC915-CCE3-4F01-9930-482B78F05FCD.jpeg (233 KB | 8 )

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Ye Grappler on Feb 8th, 2022 at 11:50pm

Lisa Jones wrote on Feb 8th, 2022 at 10:47pm:
Interesting replies.

Anyone else care to take a look at the shoe and tell me what colour it is and what colour the laces are?

Come on.....jump in quickly with the colours your eyes see.


Better to be more specific - ask what colours the shoe and laces are in this particular picture. Easy answer.  Doesn't matter what they were on the outside... they're all convicts in here...

This is really a deep philosophical question that I raise here... thinking caps, people...

Ah, Grasshopper - if a shoe is orange at cloudy sunset, but white at high noon, which truly is the colour of the shoe and what is the effect of time on its colour?

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Jim Lahey on Feb 9th, 2022 at 5:16am
certainly not black like my Merc

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Redmond Neck on Feb 9th, 2022 at 6:41am
Grey with bluey green laces

If you look for a long time the grey seems to develop a reddish tinge!

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Valkie on Feb 9th, 2022 at 7:07am

Redmond Neck wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 6:41am:
Grey with bluey green laces

If you look for a long time the grey seems to develop a reddish tinge!


It seems that the trolls and socks are all too incompetent or simply cannot stop being morons long enough to actually post what they see.

I see the same as red.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Gnads on Feb 9th, 2022 at 7:21am
The shoe looks pink with white laces to me.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Bobby. on Feb 9th, 2022 at 7:35am
Hi Lisa,
the image you have shown has the colours out of balance.
There is not enough Red.

When put in Photoshop and the Red channel boosted -
the laces return to the correct colour of White -
the shoe changes to Pink
and the thumb and hand returns to normal skin tones.

So your picture was either taken in the wrong light
or was mal-adjusted in Photoshop.

I have returned it to normal here:


24FEC915-CCE3-4F01-9930-482B78F05FCD_boosted_Red.jpg (142 KB | 6 )

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Lisa Jones on Feb 9th, 2022 at 7:47am
Bobby.

The question was this :

What colours do your eyes see when they look at the shoe I have provided.

It's a simple question.

I didn't ask you anything else.

Now. Here is MY ORIGINAL pic.

As soon as your eyeballs look at the shoe....what colour is the shoe and what colour is the shoe lace.

That's all I asked.

Please answer exactly what your eyes see.


FC896D02-547C-427F-B37A-BE8A8ECEE7AB.jpeg (233 KB | 9 )

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Lisa Jones on Feb 9th, 2022 at 7:50am

Gnads wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 7:21am:
The shoe looks pink with white laces to me.


Simple question.

Simple answer.

Awesome stuff 👌

So let me just double check : Gnads you're saying that my attached pic is of a pink shoe with white laces

👇 This pic is of a pink shoe with white laces. And you're very sure of it. Yes?
F0C505C2-0548-4F2B-8DCA-8420C312B801.jpeg (233 KB | 8 )

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Lisa Jones on Feb 9th, 2022 at 7:51am

Redmond Neck wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 6:41am:
Grey with bluey green laces


That's what I see also.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Lisa Jones on Feb 9th, 2022 at 7:54am

Baronvonrort wrote on Feb 8th, 2022 at 10:07pm:
Looks like a shade of pink with white laces


Let me double check with you Baron.

You are saying that the attached pic is of a pink shoe with white laces. Yes?

👇 This pic.
FD853930-41BA-41EB-8803-56BCA282C3B1.jpeg (233 KB | 4 )

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Bobby. on Feb 9th, 2022 at 7:58am

Lisa Jones wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 7:47am:
Bobby.

The question was this :

What colours do your eyes see when they look at the shoe I have provided.

It's a simple question.

I didn't ask you anything else.

Now. Here is MY ORIGINAL pic.

As soon as your eyeballs look at the shoe....what colour is the shoe and what colour is the shoe lace.

That's all I asked.

Please answer exactly what your eyes see.



The laces are Turquoise and the shoe is Grey.

What is your point?
It looks like the pic was adjusted to find people
with colour blindness.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by greggerypeccary on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:05am

I see grey and turquoise/teal in the photo.

I suspect in real life it's probably pink and white though.


Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Lisa Jones on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:17am
We are all looking at MY ORIGINAL pic of a shoe with laces.

Some Ozpoliticians look at MY ORIGINAL pic and see a grey shoe with pastel green laces. I'm one of them.

Yet others Ozpoliticians look at MY ORIGINAL pic and see a pink shoe with white laces.

Same shoe.

Different answers.

They can't both be right.

Is this a trick? Have I deliberately asked some of you to post a different answer? Are some of you lying?

No!

I can assure you that EVERY single answer here is truthful. And no one was asked by me to deliberately post a different set of colours.

Ok so what's happening here?

Take a closer look at the topic title for a clue.

Our PERCEPTION is at the core of why our answers are different.

1. IF you're more left brained your brain will allow you to see a grey shoe with pastel green laces.

2. IF you're more right brained...your brain will allow you to see a pink shoe with white laces.

Very rarely will a person be able to look at my original pic and see both 1. and 2.

Actually the only Ozpolitician who reported this was Grappler.

The reason why I posted this topic up?

We perceive the world around us quite differently to others. It's not always just about how we've been brought up ( a large part of it is though ).

In life .... you will find that some of us don't see what others can. Yet others just can't see what we can.

We're all different. And that's what makes us the same.


Parting comment : The pic of the shoe which I put up is apparently pink with white laces. Yet I will never ever admit to that. Why? I can only see a grey shoe with green laces. I'm clearly more left brained.

Please share this exercise with your family and friends. It's a fun way of seeing who is more left brained and who is more right brained.

(Left brained people tend to be oriented towards logic, maths and are very analytical. Their minds stress over the nitty gritty)

Now ..... if you haven't yet come into this topic .... please by all means jump in and tell us the colour of the shoe and shoe laces in this pic.




51EA7B96-876D-4EE0-B175-427590A7D0C3.jpeg (233 KB | 9 )

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Bobby. on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:18am
Hi Lisa,
why did you upload  the same picture 6 times?

Your original picture has the link:
https://www.ozpolitic.com/album/forum-attachments/A9EC6518-68B8-49D4-B2AA-E27FE69CCE84.jpeg

which if you put the image brackets around it -
it will post the same pic again
without uploading the pic again and again.
It just wastes space in the picture attachment area of Ozpolitic
which has been overloaded before -
FD had to allocate more space for it at one stage.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Lisa Jones on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:22am

greggerypeccary wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:05am:
I see grey and turquoise/teal in the photo.


I thought you'd say that.

I reckon both Bobby, Black Orchid, Freediver and Aussie will see grey and turquoise too.

Setanta and Vic? I'm not really sure. Probably grey and turquoise I reckon.




Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Gnads on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:22am

Lisa Jones wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 7:50am:

Gnads wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 7:21am:
The shoe looks pink with white laces to me.


Simple question.

Simple answer.

Awesome stuff 👌

So let me just double check : Gnads you're saying that my attached pic is of a pink shoe with white laces

👇 This pic is of a pink shoe with white laces. And you're very sure of it. Yes?


That's what I said - pink shoe - white laces. ::)

Are you going to elaborate?

Now read my tea leaves Gypsy!
Tea_leaves.jpg (13 KB | 9 )

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by greggerypeccary on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:25am

Lisa Jones wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:17am:
1. IF you're more left brained your brain will allow you to see a grey shoe with pastel green laces.

2. IF you're more right brained...your brain will allow you to see a pink shoe with white laces.


"Some people see a teal and grey sneaker, others see pink and white – but there’s no evidence that what you see determines which side of your brain is most dominant."

People are still debating the pink or grey sneaker, 2 years after it went viral. Here’s the real colour explained.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Lisa Jones on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:30am

Bobby. wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:18am:
Hi Lisa,
why did you upload  the same picture 6 times?

Your original picture has the link:
https://www.ozpolitic.com/album/forum-attachments/A9EC6518-68B8-49D4-B2AA-E27FE69CCE84.jpeg

which if you put the image brackets around it -
it will post the same pic again
without uploading the pic again and again.
It just wastes space in the picture attachment area of Ozpolitic
which has been overloaded before -
FD had to allocate more space for it at one stage.


Yep. STILL stressing over the nitty gritty and being all analytical.

You definitely saw a grey shoe with turquoise laces.

Actually out of everyone on Ozpolitics...you Bobby, stressed out the most about this pic - not only what the pic showed but also every conceivable specification affecting it. The left part of your brain is very powerful. The right side of your brain needs more exercise Bobby.






Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Bobby. on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:37am

Lisa Jones wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:30am:

Bobby. wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:18am:
Hi Lisa,
why did you upload  the same picture 6 times?

Your original picture has the link:
https://www.ozpolitic.com/album/forum-attachments/A9EC6518-68B8-49D4-B2AA-E27FE69CCE84.jpeg

which if you put the image brackets around it -
it will post the same pic again
without uploading the pic again and again.
It just wastes space in the picture attachment area of Ozpolitic
which has been overloaded before -
FD had to allocate more space for it at one stage.


Yep. STILL stressing over the nitty gritty and being all analytical.

You definitely saw a grey shoe with turquoise laces.

Actually out of everyone on Ozpolitics...you Bobby, stressed out the most about this pic - not only what the pic showed but also every conceivable specification affecting it. The left part of your brain is very powerful. The right side of your brain needs more exercise Bobby.



Hi Lisa,
you didn't answer my question about uploading?

Also:
You said

Quote:
Please share this exercise with your family and friends.
It's a fun way of seeing who is more left brained and who is more right brained.


It has nothing to do with the left and right brain -
it's about colour blindness.
That is caused by a lack of colour receptor cells in the retina of the eye.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Lisa Jones on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:47am

Bobby. wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:37am:

Lisa Jones wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:30am:

Bobby. wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:18am:
Hi Lisa,
why did you upload  the same picture 6 times?

Your original picture has the link:
https://www.ozpolitic.com/album/forum-attachments/A9EC6518-68B8-49D4-B2AA-E27FE69CCE84.jpeg

which if you put the image brackets around it -
it will post the same pic again
without uploading the pic again and again.
It just wastes space in the picture attachment area of Ozpolitic
which has been overloaded before -
FD had to allocate more space for it at one stage.


Yep. STILL stressing over the nitty gritty and being all analytical.

You definitely saw a grey shoe with turquoise laces.

Actually out of everyone on Ozpolitics...you Bobby, stressed out the most about this pic - not only what the pic showed but also every conceivable specification affecting it. The left part of your brain is very powerful. The right side of your brain needs more exercise Bobby.



Hi Lisa,
you didn't answer my question about uploading?

Also:
You said

Quote:
Please share this exercise with your family and friends.
It's a fun way of seeing who is more left brained and who is more right brained.


It has nothing to do with the left and right brain -
it's about colour blindness.
That is caused by a lack of colour receptor cells in the retina of the eye.


No. It has nothing to do with colour blindness.

Women AND men will report either pink shoes or grey shoes.

Remember women can't be colour blind. It's in our genotype not phenotype.

Have a read of this next article I'm about to put up (which will hopefully be enough of an explanation for you Bobby)

OMG you are such a typical left brainiac lol.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Lisa Jones on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:50am
Is the shoe pink or grey? What you see tells something interesting about you.

Some are seeing the footwear as a combination of grey and teal, while others are viewing it as a pink sneaker with white edges. Bizarre, isn’t it? The shoe is stirring up quite a sensation online as people continue to pit against each other because of the maddening illusion.

The debate actually began when a UK woman posted a picture of these sneaky sneakers on a Facebook group, insisting that they were pink in colour.


SO, ARE THESE SHOES TEAL AND GREY, OR PINK AND WHITE?

*Drum rolls* The shoes are actually pink and white. So, all of you who are viewing it as blue and teal, your eyes are deceiving you. Several theories are floating around online which talk about the right and left brain dominance. It is being said that if your left brain is dominant, you will see grey and green and if your right brain is dominant, you are bound to see pink and white.

Left-brain dominance

The theory of left-brain dominance says that people who are actually “left-brained” tend to be more logical, practical and analytical. They also prefer cold, hard facts.

Right-brain dominance

While on the other hand, the “right-brained” people are more imaginative, thoughtful and even intuitive. They also tend to more creative and artistic by nature.

So, why exactly do we see the colours differently. Experts have actually weighed in to settle this ferocious debate.

According to Wally Thoreson, professor of ophthalmology and visual sciences at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, “People who see a pink shoe see a blue light in the background.

People who see a grey shoe are being told by their brains that the light is white. In the case of this image, our brain is also taking cues from the colour of the hand holding the shoe.

And some people may have subconsciously factored in that shoelaces are typically white.”
"Each of us makes slightly different unconscious assumptions,” he also added.

This biological phenomenon actually says a lot about the ways in which our body functions and the choices our magnificent brain makes.

The Vans footwear in question is actually pink in colour and is sold online in Europe



Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Ye Grappler on Feb 9th, 2022 at 9:12am
Grasshopper - you admitted the light was rigged - the colour is as it is seen as it is.  Put the photo in another light.  This is a silly cheat.

It doesn't matter that a cat is black during the day if it is grey at night.  You see what you see, and there is no failure or weakness in the sight of the viewer.... no error.  Our eyes are perfect as they are and for good reason.

Silly game.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Dnarever on Feb 9th, 2022 at 9:35am

Gnads wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:22am:

Lisa Jones wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 7:50am:

Gnads wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 7:21am:
The shoe looks pink with white laces to me.


Simple question.

Simple answer.

Awesome stuff 👌

So let me just double check : Gnads you're saying that my attached pic is of a pink shoe with white laces

👇 This pic is of a pink shoe with white laces. And you're very sure of it. Yes?


That's what I said - pink shoe - white laces. ::)

Are you going to elaborate?

Now read my tea leaves Gypsy!


Oh - Tessomancy .

My dear you have the Grim.

One of the darkest omens.


Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Redmond Neck on Feb 9th, 2022 at 9:42am
Another famous one is the dress black and blue or white and gold

Actually looks brown and blue to me!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_dress


The_dress_blueblackwhitegold.jpg (79 KB | 6 )

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Dnarever on Feb 9th, 2022 at 9:42am
An odd thing to me is that the grey shoe has a lot of teal bleed and areas of pink tinge but the ringer is that most of the stitching looks white.

Considering that the white laces have been perceived as blue - green I would assume that the white stitches should do the same but they don't.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Ye Grappler on Feb 9th, 2022 at 9:51am

Redmond Neck wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 9:42am:
Another famous one is the dress black and blue or white and gold

Actually looks brown and blue to me!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_dress



Was that in a rigged light as well?  If there were visual differences between individuals in normal light I might consider this.... when it is rigged...

This may have nothing at all to do with 'left brain/right brain' - but more to do with the physical structure of the individual eye.  I see better at night than most, and suffer badly from glare during the day.

When every individual has different DNA structure, it seems to me near impossible to bring such a thing down to a single idea of brain side dominance, and inferred characteristics, such as creativity etc, stemming from that.  Much of this sounds like conjecture to me, with more than a tinge of elitism either way.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Dnarever on Feb 9th, 2022 at 9:58am

Grappler Racist Filth wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 9:51am:

Redmond Neck wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 9:42am:
Another famous one is the dress black and blue or white and gold

Actually looks brown and blue to me!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_dress



Was that in a rigged light as well?  If there were visual differences between individuals in normal light I might consider this.... when it is rigged...


The explanation said that it is the perceived light natural or artificial which is unknown. It goes on to say that owls people who are awake in the night naturally assume artificial and that early risers naturally assume natural light. This impacts peoples default choice on blue balance. In natural light people auto reduce the impact of blue from the sky but night people naturally remove yellow from what they see.

I do not see a reason for this confusion as I clearly see what looks like natural external light reflected from a window in the dress image which is too bright to be a normal artificial light.

https://slate.com/technology/2017/04/heres-why-people-saw-the-dress-differently.html

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Gnads on Feb 9th, 2022 at 10:14am

Bobby. wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:37am:

Lisa Jones wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:30am:

Bobby. wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:18am:
Hi Lisa,
why did you upload  the same picture 6 times?

Your original picture has the link:
https://www.ozpolitic.com/album/forum-attachments/A9EC6518-68B8-49D4-B2AA-E27FE69CCE84.jpeg

which if you put the image brackets around it -
it will post the same pic again
without uploading the pic again and again.
It just wastes space in the picture attachment area of Ozpolitic
which has been overloaded before -
FD had to allocate more space for it at one stage.


Yep. STILL stressing over the nitty gritty and being all analytical.

You definitely saw a grey shoe with turquoise laces.

Actually out of everyone on Ozpolitics...you Bobby, stressed out the most about this pic - not only what the pic showed but also every conceivable specification affecting it. The left part of your brain is very powerful. The right side of your brain needs more exercise Bobby.



Hi Lisa,
you didn't answer my question about uploading?

Also:
You said

Quote:
Please share this exercise with your family and friends.
It's a fun way of seeing who is more left brained and who is more right brained.


It has nothing to do with the left and right brain -
it's about colour blindness.
That is caused by a lack of colour receptor cells in the retina of the eye.


;D There's no such thing - it's a misnomer.

It's called colour deficiency..... not blindness.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Bobby. on Feb 9th, 2022 at 10:22am

Gnads wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 10:14am:
;D There's no such thing - it's a misnomer.

It's called colour deficiency..... not blindness.



Apologise:


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_blindness


Color blindness (color vision deficiency) is the decreased ability to see color or differences in color.[3] It can impair tasks such as selecting ripe fruit, choosing clothing, and reading traffic lights.[3] Color blindness may make some educational activities more difficult.[3] However, problems are generally minor, and most color-blind adapt.[3] People with total color blindness (achromatopsia) may also be uncomfortable in bright environments[3] and have decreased visual acuity.

The most common cause of color blindness is an inherited problem in the development of one or more of the three sets of the eyes' cone cells, which sense color.[3] Among humans, males are more likely to be color blind than females, because the genes responsible for the most common forms of color blindness are on the X chromosome.[3] Females have two X chromosomes, so a defect in one is typically compensated for by the other. Non-color-blind females can carry genes for color blindness and pass them on to their children.[3] Males only have one X chromosome and therefore always express the genetic disorder if they have the recessive gene.[3] Color blindness can also result from physical or chemical damage to the eye, the optic nerve, or parts of the brain.[3] Diagnosis is typically with the Ishihara color test; other methods include genetic testing.[3][4]

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Gnads on Feb 9th, 2022 at 10:29am

Bobby. wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 10:22am:

Gnads wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 10:14am:
;D There's no such thing - it's a misnomer.

It's called colour deficiency..... not blindness.



Apologise:


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_blindness


Color blindness (color vision deficiency) is the decreased ability to see color or differences in color.[3] It can impair tasks such as selecting ripe fruit, choosing clothing, and reading traffic lights.[3] Color blindness may make some educational activities more difficult.[3] However, problems are generally minor, and most color-blind adapt.[3] People with total color blindness (achromatopsia) may also be uncomfortable in bright environments[3] and have decreased visual acuity.

The most common cause of color blindness is an inherited problem in the development of one or more of the three sets of the eyes' cone cells, which sense color.[3] Among humans, males are more likely to be color blind than females, because the genes responsible for the most common forms of color blindness are on the X chromosome.[3] Females have two X chromosomes, so a defect in one is typically compensated for by the other. Non-color-blind females can carry genes for color blindness and pass them on to their children.[3] Males only have one X chromosome and therefore always express the genetic disorder if they have the recessive gene.[3] Color blindness can also result from physical or chemical damage to the eye, the optic nerve, or parts of the brain.[3] Diagnosis is typically with the Ishihara color test; other methods include genetic testing.[3][4]

 
It's there in you're own quote you idiot.

The use of the words "colour blindness" is an oft used & common misconception.

The "colour blindness" reference is there so common dumbarses like you can understand what you been lead to believe all your life.

You cannot be "blind" to(not see) colour & you cannot acquire colour deficiency as you age .... you are born with it.

Just face it Booby you're as clever as a box of rocks.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Bobby. on Feb 9th, 2022 at 10:32am

Gnads wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 10:29am:

Bobby. wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 10:22am:

Gnads wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 10:14am:
;D There's no such thing - it's a misnomer.

It's called colour deficiency..... not blindness.



Apologise:


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_blindness


Color blindness (color vision deficiency) is the decreased ability to see color or differences in color.[3] It can impair tasks such as selecting ripe fruit, choosing clothing, and reading traffic lights.[3] Color blindness may make some educational activities more difficult.[3] However, problems are generally minor, and most color-blind adapt.[3] People with total color blindness (achromatopsia) may also be uncomfortable in bright environments[3] and have decreased visual acuity.

The most common cause of color blindness is an inherited problem in the development of one or more of the three sets of the eyes' cone cells, which sense color.[3] Among humans, males are more likely to be color blind than females, because the genes responsible for the most common forms of color blindness are on the X chromosome.[3] Females have two X chromosomes, so a defect in one is typically compensated for by the other. Non-color-blind females can carry genes for color blindness and pass them on to their children.[3] Males only have one X chromosome and therefore always express the genetic disorder if they have the recessive gene.[3] Color blindness can also result from physical or chemical damage to the eye, the optic nerve, or parts of the brain.[3] Diagnosis is typically with the Ishihara color test; other methods include genetic testing.[3][4]

 
It's there in you're own quote you idiot.

The use of the words "colour blindness" is an oft used & common misconception.

The "colour blindness" reference is there so common dumbarses like you can understand what you been lead to believe all your life.

You cannot be "blind" to(not see) colour & you cannot acquire colour deficiency as you age .... you are born with it.

Just face it Bobby you're as clever as a box of rocks.



Apologise as you said

There's no such thing

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Dnarever on Feb 9th, 2022 at 10:35am
This shows you how to see the dress in both colours. It sort of works. Interesting for me is that I see the dress as Black Blue everywhere but here I see white gold. I do see the blue black somewhat peripherally.


https://www.businessinsider.com.au/how-to-see-the-dress-as-white-and-gold-and-black-and-blue-2015-2

When I went back to the page later I only seen the blue black until I went through the Liar image first and worked down the page. Doing this changed the colour i was seeing.

Does not work with the shoe.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by greggerypeccary on Feb 9th, 2022 at 11:34am

Lisa Jones wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:30am:

Bobby. wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:18am:
Hi Lisa,
why did you upload  the same picture 6 times?

Your original picture has the link:
https://www.ozpolitic.com/album/forum-attachments/A9EC6518-68B8-49D4-B2AA-E27FE69CCE84.jpeg

which if you put the image brackets around it -
it will post the same pic again
without uploading the pic again and again.
It just wastes space in the picture attachment area of Ozpolitic
which has been overloaded before -
FD had to allocate more space for it at one stage.


Yep. STILL stressing over the nitty gritty and being all analytical.

You definitely saw a grey shoe with turquoise laces.

Actually out of everyone on Ozpolitics...you Bobby, stressed out the most about this pic - not only what the pic showed but also every conceivable specification affecting it. The left part of your brain is very powerful. The right side of your brain needs more exercise Bobby.


" ... there’s no evidence that what you see determines which side of your brain is most dominant."


Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Ye Grappler on Feb 9th, 2022 at 12:37pm

Dnarever wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 9:58am:

Grappler Racist Filth wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 9:51am:

Redmond Neck wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 9:42am:
Another famous one is the dress black and blue or white and gold

Actually looks brown and blue to me!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_dress



Was that in a rigged light as well?  If there were visual differences between individuals in normal light I might consider this.... when it is rigged...


The explanation said that it is the perceived light natural or artificial which is unknown. It goes on to say that owls people who are awake in the night naturally assume artificial and that early risers naturally assume natural light. This impacts peoples default choice on blue balance. In natural light people auto reduce the impact of blue from the sky but night people naturally remove yellow from what they see.

I do not see a reason for this confusion as I clearly see what looks like natural external light reflected from a window in the dress image which is too bright to be a normal artificial light.

https://slate.com/technology/2017/04/heres-why-people-saw-the-dress-differently.html


Photoshop?

The shoe is most likely under a strong fluoro light in a cabinet or similar, which gives the false image.  If it was in natural light the colours would be clear to all.  As I said - this is a cheat....

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Laugh till you cry on Feb 9th, 2022 at 12:46pm
Only an intervention by Valkie/Vickie could make this string relevant.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by UnSubRocky on Feb 9th, 2022 at 3:53pm

Lisa Jones wrote on Feb 8th, 2022 at 5:49pm:
Rocky what colours do you see right now when you look at that shoe?


I had seen this picture posted somewhere on the internet some time ago. What I saw was pink shoes with turquoise laces. The answer was something like red shoes with white laces.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Dnarever on Feb 9th, 2022 at 5:02pm

Grappler Racist Filth wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 12:37pm:

Dnarever wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 9:58am:

Grappler Racist Filth wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 9:51am:

Redmond Neck wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 9:42am:
Another famous one is the dress black and blue or white and gold

Actually looks brown and blue to me!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_dress



Was that in a rigged light as well?  If there were visual differences between individuals in normal light I might consider this.... when it is rigged...


The explanation said that it is the perceived light natural or artificial which is unknown. It goes on to say that owls people who are awake in the night naturally assume artificial and that early risers naturally assume natural light. This impacts peoples default choice on blue balance. In natural light people auto reduce the impact of blue from the sky but night people naturally remove yellow from what they see.

I do not see a reason for this confusion as I clearly see what looks like natural external light reflected from a window in the dress image which is too bright to be a normal artificial light.

https://slate.com/technology/2017/04/heres-why-people-saw-the-dress-differently.html


Photoshop?

The shoe is most likely under a strong fluoro light in a cabinet or similar, which gives the false image.  If it was in natural light the colours would be clear to all.  As I said - this is a cheat....


If it were light influenced why would people see different colours. While i see that this would skew the colour it should do the same for everyone?

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Ye Grappler on Feb 9th, 2022 at 7:48pm

Dnarever wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 5:02pm:

Grappler Racist Filth wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 12:37pm:

Dnarever wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 9:58am:

Grappler Racist Filth wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 9:51am:

Redmond Neck wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 9:42am:
Another famous one is the dress black and blue or white and gold

Actually looks brown and blue to me!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_dress



Was that in a rigged light as well?  If there were visual differences between individuals in normal light I might consider this.... when it is rigged...


The explanation said that it is the perceived light natural or artificial which is unknown. It goes on to say that owls people who are awake in the night naturally assume artificial and that early risers naturally assume natural light. This impacts peoples default choice on blue balance. In natural light people auto reduce the impact of blue from the sky but night people naturally remove yellow from what they see.

I do not see a reason for this confusion as I clearly see what looks like natural external light reflected from a window in the dress image which is too bright to be a normal artificial light.

https://slate.com/technology/2017/04/heres-why-people-saw-the-dress-differently.html


Photoshop?

The shoe is most likely under a strong fluoro light in a cabinet or similar, which gives the false image.  If it was in natural light the colours would be clear to all.  As I said - this is a cheat....


If it were light influenced why would people see different colours. While i see that this would skew the colour it should do the same for everyone?


Well - it ain't under natural light or they'd all see the same colours.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Bobby. on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:19pm
I repeat myself here as I was right all along.


Hi Lisa,
the image you have shown has the colours out of balance.
There is not enough Red.

When put in Photoshop and the Red channel boosted -
the laces return to the correct colour of White -
the shoe changes to Pink
and the thumb and hand returns to normal skin tones.

So your picture was either taken in the wrong light
or was mal-adjusted in Photoshop.

I have returned it to normal here:





Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Dnarever on Feb 10th, 2022 at 7:38am

Grappler Racist Filth wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 7:48pm:

Dnarever wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 5:02pm:

Grappler Racist Filth wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 12:37pm:

Dnarever wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 9:58am:

Grappler Racist Filth wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 9:51am:

Redmond Neck wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 9:42am:
Another famous one is the dress black and blue or white and gold

Actually looks brown and blue to me!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_dress



Was that in a rigged light as well?  If there were visual differences between individuals in normal light I might consider this.... when it is rigged...


The explanation said that it is the perceived light natural or artificial which is unknown. It goes on to say that owls people who are awake in the night naturally assume artificial and that early risers naturally assume natural light. This impacts peoples default choice on blue balance. In natural light people auto reduce the impact of blue from the sky but night people naturally remove yellow from what they see.

I do not see a reason for this confusion as I clearly see what looks like natural external light reflected from a window in the dress image which is too bright to be a normal artificial light.

https://slate.com/technology/2017/04/heres-why-people-saw-the-dress-differently.html


Photoshop?

The shoe is most likely under a strong fluoro light in a cabinet or similar, which gives the false image.  If it was in natural light the colours would be clear to all.  As I said - this is a cheat....


If it were light influenced why would people see different colours. While i see that this would skew the colour it should do the same for everyone?


Well - it ain't under natural light or they'd all see the same colours.


It is definitely not under natural light or the colour balance is somehow adjusted. But still the explanation for people seeing different colours is not explained by this fact. It does set the stage for the difference in colour perception to be triggered. whatever that is.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Gnads on Feb 10th, 2022 at 9:04am

Bobby. wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:19pm:
I repeat myself here as I was right all along.


Hi Lisa,
the image you have shown has the colours out of balance.
There is not enough Red.

When put in Photoshop and the Red channel boosted -
the laces return to the correct colour of White -
the shoe changes to Pink
and the thumb and hand returns to normal skin tones.

So your picture was either taken in the wrong light
or was mal-adjusted in Photoshop.

I have returned it to normal here:





;D

That's exactly the same colours I saw in her photo.

Pink shoe white laces

You dolt

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Bobby. on Feb 10th, 2022 at 9:15am

Gnads wrote on Feb 10th, 2022 at 9:04am:

Bobby. wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:19pm:
I repeat myself here as I was right all along.


Hi Lisa,
the image you have shown has the colours out of balance.
There is not enough Red.

When put in Photoshop and the Red channel boosted -
the laces return to the correct colour of White -
the shoe changes to Pink
and the thumb and hand returns to normal skin tones.

So your picture was either taken in the wrong light
or was mal-adjusted in Photoshop.

I have returned it to normal here:





;D

That's exactly the same colours I saw in her photo.

Pink shoe white laces

You dolt



Then do a Google search for a colour blind test.
You dolt.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Lisa Jones on Feb 10th, 2022 at 9:36am

Gnads wrote on Feb 10th, 2022 at 9:04am:

Bobby. wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:19pm:
I repeat myself here as I was right all along.


Hi Lisa,
the image you have shown has the colours out of balance.
There is not enough Red.

When put in Photoshop and the Red channel boosted -
the laces return to the correct colour of White -
the shoe changes to Pink
and the thumb and hand returns to normal skin tones.

So your picture was either taken in the wrong light
or was mal-adjusted in Photoshop.

I have returned it to normal here:





;D

That's exactly the same colours I saw in her photo.

Pink shoe white laces

You dolt


That's interesting.

Bobby and I are showing you different coloured shoes but you only see pink and white.

A number of my cousins (both male and female) are like you Gnads. They simply do not see grey shoes with turquoise laces irrespective of my original pic vs the pic Bobby has put up.

There are a number of competing theories as to why. I have previously posted what the more prevailing and persuasive ones have concluded.

Our brains function differently.

NB This has NOTHING to do with colour blindness. The same conclusions reached by Gnads who is a male is also reported by females.

Females cannot be colour blind. Colour blindness is a sex linked issue.





Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Lisa Jones on Feb 10th, 2022 at 9:39am
Here is the more prevalent and persuasive perspective on what is really going on:


Lisa Jones wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:50am:
Is the shoe pink or grey? What you see tells something interesting about you.

Some are seeing the footwear as a combination of grey and teal, while others are viewing it as a pink sneaker with white edges. Bizarre, isn’t it? The shoe is stirring up quite a sensation online as people continue to pit against each other because of the maddening illusion.

The debate actually began when a UK woman posted a picture of these sneaky sneakers on a Facebook group, insisting that they were pink in colour.


SO, ARE THESE SHOES TEAL AND GREY, OR PINK AND WHITE?

*Drum rolls* The shoes are actually pink and white. So, all of you who are viewing it as blue and teal, your eyes are deceiving you. Several theories are floating around online which talk about the right and left brain dominance. It is being said that if your left brain is dominant, you will see grey and green and if your right brain is dominant, you are bound to see pink and white.

Left-brain dominance

The theory of left-brain dominance says that people who are actually “left-brained” tend to be more logical, practical and analytical. They also prefer cold, hard facts.

Right-brain dominance

While on the other hand, the “right-brained” people are more imaginative, thoughtful and even intuitive. They also tend to more creative and artistic by nature.

So, why exactly do we see the colours differently. Experts have actually weighed in to settle this ferocious debate.

According to Wally Thoreson, professor of ophthalmology and visual sciences at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, “People who see a pink shoe see a blue light in the background.

People who see a grey shoe are being told by their brains that the light is white. In the case of this image, our brain is also taking cues from the colour of the hand holding the shoe.

And some people may have subconsciously factored in that shoelaces are typically white.”
"Each of us makes slightly different unconscious assumptions,” he also added.

This biological phenomenon actually says a lot about the ways in which our body functions and the choices our magnificent brain makes.

The Vans footwear in question is actually pink in colour and is sold online in Europe


Title: Re: • DecEpTiOn •
Post by Laugh till you cry on Feb 10th, 2022 at 9:40am
Deception.

"Can a female be colourblind?
Image result for can females be color blind
The primary cause of color blindness is a lack of light-sensitive pigments in the cones of the eye. This inherited condition affects mostly males , but females can also be colorblind.Feb 13, 2020"

Lisa Jones wrong again.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Lisa Jones on Feb 10th, 2022 at 9:52am

Bobby. wrote on Feb 10th, 2022 at 9:15am:

Gnads wrote on Feb 10th, 2022 at 9:04am:

Bobby. wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:19pm:
I repeat myself here as I was right all along.


Hi Lisa,
the image you have shown has the colours out of balance.
There is not enough Red.

When put in Photoshop and the Red channel boosted -
the laces return to the correct colour of White -
the shoe changes to Pink
and the thumb and hand returns to normal skin tones.

So your picture was either taken in the wrong light
or was mal-adjusted in Photoshop.

I have returned it to normal here:





;D

That's exactly the same colours I saw in her photo.

Pink shoe white laces

You dolt



Then do a Google search for a colour blind test.
You dolt.


Bobby

This is all I could find on colour blindness.

It's only 12 months old stuff too.

Colour blindness is a common hereditary (inherited) condition which means it is usually passed down from your parents.

Red/green colour blindness is passed from mother to son on the 23rd chromosome, which is known as the sex chromosome because it also determines sex. Chromosomes are structures which contain genes – these contain the instructions for the development of cells, tissues and organs. If you are colour blind it means the instructions for the development of your cone cells are different to those for people who have ‘normal’ colour vision meaning one cone cell type might be missing, or less sensitive to light or it may be that the pathway from your cone cells to your brain has not developed in the usual way.

For the sake of simplicity we refer to a colour blind ‘gene’ but this is not strictly a true description.

The 23rd chromosome is made up of two parts – either two X chromosomes if you are female or an X and a Y chromosome if you are male. The ‘gene’ which causes (inherited, red and green types of) colour blindness is found only on the X chromosome. So, for a male to be colour blind the colour blindness ‘gene’ only has to appear on his X chromosome. For a female to be colour blind it must be present on both of her X chromosomes.

If a woman has only one colour blind ‘gene’ she is known as a ‘carrier’ but she won’t be colour blind. When she has a child she will give one of her X chromosomes to the child. If she gives the X chromosome with the colour blindness ‘gene’ to her son he will be colour blind, but if he receives the X chromosome which doesn’t carry the colour blindness ‘gene’, he won’t be colour blind.

A colour blind boy can’t receive a colour blind ‘gene’ from his father, even if his father is colour blind, because his father can only pass an X chromosome to his daughters.

A colour blind daughter therefore must have a father who is colour blind and a mother who is a carrier (who has also passed the colour blindness ‘gene’ to her daughter). If her father is not colour blind, a ‘carrier’ daughter won’t be colour blind. A daughter can become a carrier in one of two ways – she can acquire the ‘gene’ from a carrier mother or from a colour blind father.

This is why red/green colour blindness is far more common in men than women.

Blue/yellow colour blindness affects both men and women equally, because it is carried on a non-sex chromosome.

For the sake of the following explanation a normal X chromosome is shown as (X) whilst a colour blind carrying X chromosome is shown in bold (X).

The colour blind ‘gene’ is carried on one of the X chromosomes. Since men have only one X chromosome, if his X chromosome carries the colour blind ‘gene’ (X) he will be colour blind (XY). A woman can have either:-
(i) two normal X chromosomes, so that she will not be colour blind or be a carrier (XX),
(ii) or, one normal X and one colour blind carrying X chromosome, in which case she will be a carrier (XX), or rarely
(iii)      she will inherit a colour blind X from her father and a colour blind X from her mother and be colour blind herself (XX). She will pass on colour blindness to all of her sons if this is the case.

Bottom Line?

Colour blindness is rare in women and colours affected are narrow in range.

Note : When I was at Uni back in the 1990's ...we were taught that colour blindness was essentially like hemophilia :

• Sex linked

• males - phenotype

• females - genotype

Fast forward to today : Science has identified more conditions AND RARE INSTANCES where women have exhibited these conditions.

This topic is not about colour blindness.

If it was then I have 3 female cousins from the same family who are all colour blind and their only brother isn't colour blind 😂🤣😆



Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Mustapha_Khunt on Feb 10th, 2022 at 10:37am

Bobby. wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:19pm:
I repeat myself here as I was right all along.


Hi Lisa,
the image you have shown has the colours out of balance.
There is not enough Red.

When put in Photoshop and the Red channel boosted -
the laces return to the correct colour of White -
the shoe changes to Pink
and the thumb and hand returns to normal skin tones.

So your picture was either taken in the wrong light
or was mal-adjusted in Photoshop.

I have returned it to normal here:





Thanks, Bobby. I trust that puts the matter to rest.

Stop trying to perceive, leftards, you're wasting your time. Shoe colour doesn't count.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Gnads on Feb 10th, 2022 at 6:05pm

Bobby. wrote on Feb 10th, 2022 at 9:15am:

Gnads wrote on Feb 10th, 2022 at 9:04am:

Bobby. wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:19pm:
I repeat myself here as I was right all along.


Hi Lisa,
the image you have shown has the colours out of balance.
There is not enough Red.

When put in Photoshop and the Red channel boosted -
the laces return to the correct colour of White -
the shoe changes to Pink
and the thumb and hand returns to normal skin tones.

So your picture was either taken in the wrong light
or was mal-adjusted in Photoshop.

I have returned it to normal here:





;D

That's exactly the same colours I saw in her photo.

Pink shoe white laces

You dolt



Then do a Google search for a colour blind test.
You dolt.


It's called an Isihara Test you dolt.

I used to have to do one for every work medical I undertook.

It's bullshit because if you pass it you don't have ..

"COLOUR DEFICIENCY".

You cannot acquire it you are born with it.

You are not "blind" to colour,

you are non receptive to certain colours.

The term "colour blindness" is a misnomer.

And dopes like you do not fathom that.


Quote:
The Ishihara test is a color perception test for red-green color deficiencies, the first in a class of successful color vision tests called pseudo-isochromatic plates ("PIP"). It was named after its designer, Shinobu Ishihara, a professor at the University of Tokyo, who first published his tests in 1917.[2]


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ishihara_test

Get a grip dipshyte.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Gnads on Feb 10th, 2022 at 6:07pm

Lisa Jones wrote on Feb 10th, 2022 at 9:36am:

Gnads wrote on Feb 10th, 2022 at 9:04am:

Bobby. wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:19pm:
I repeat myself here as I was right all along.


Hi Lisa,
the image you have shown has the colours out of balance.
There is not enough Red.

When put in Photoshop and the Red channel boosted -
the laces return to the correct colour of White -
the shoe changes to Pink
and the thumb and hand returns to normal skin tones.

So your picture was either taken in the wrong light
or was mal-adjusted in Photoshop.

I have returned it to normal here:





;D

That's exactly the same colours I saw in her photo.

Pink shoe white laces

You dolt


That's interesting.

Bobby and I are showing you different coloured shoes but you only see pink and white.

A number of my cousins (both male and female) are like you Gnads. They simply do not see grey shoes with turquoise laces irrespective of my original pic vs the pic Bobby has put up.

There are a number of competing theories as to why. I have previously posted what the more prevailing and persuasive ones have concluded.

Our brains function differently.

NB This has NOTHING to do with colour blindness. The same conclusions reached by Gnads who is a male is also reported by females.

Females cannot be colour blind. Colour blindness is a sex linked issue.


As I said to Booby there's no such thing as "colour blindness" ...

it's colour deficiency.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Dnarever on Feb 10th, 2022 at 6:26pm

Bobby. wrote on Feb 10th, 2022 at 9:15am:

Gnads wrote on Feb 10th, 2022 at 9:04am:

Bobby. wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:19pm:
I repeat myself here as I was right all along.


Hi Lisa,
the image you have shown has the colours out of balance.
There is not enough Red.

When put in Photoshop and the Red channel boosted -
the laces return to the correct colour of White -
the shoe changes to Pink
and the thumb and hand returns to normal skin tones.

So your picture was either taken in the wrong light
or was mal-adjusted in Photoshop.

I have returned it to normal here:





;D

That's exactly the same colours I saw in her photo.

Pink shoe white laces

You dolt



Then do a Google search for a colour blind test.
You dolt.


Bobby the split in perception here is something like 60% - 40% the wrong way. It isn't true that 60% are colour blind.

In my view the colour perception theory where perception between either white light - natural (blue tint) and
artificial light (yellow tint) depending on sleep preference is a better fit.

The flaw in saturation or filtering has put the image in a zone confusing to people sight brain position. Some peoples brain interprets it as natural light and filters out the blue component and some peoples brain believes the light is artificial and filters out the yellow bias.

Title: Re: • PeRcEpTiOn •
Post by Jim Lahey on Feb 10th, 2022 at 6:56pm

Lisa Jones wrote on Feb 10th, 2022 at 9:36am:

Gnads wrote on Feb 10th, 2022 at 9:04am:

Bobby. wrote on Feb 9th, 2022 at 8:19pm:
I repeat myself here as I was right all along.


Hi Lisa,
the image you have shown has the colours out of balance.
There is not enough Red.

When put in Photoshop and the Red channel boosted -
the laces return to the correct colour of White -
the shoe changes to Pink
and the thumb and hand returns to normal skin tones.

So your picture was either taken in the wrong light
or was mal-adjusted in Photoshop.

I have returned it to normal here:





;D

That's exactly the same colours I saw in her photo.

Pink shoe white laces

You dolt


That's interesting.

Bobby and I are showing you different coloured shoes but you only see pink and white.

A number of my cousins (both male and female) are like you Gnads. They simply do not see grey shoes with turquoise laces irrespective of my original pic vs the pic Bobby has put up.

There are a number of competing theories as to why. I have previously posted what the more prevailing and persuasive ones have concluded.

Our brains function differently.

NB This has NOTHING to do with colour blindness. The same conclusions reached by Gnads who is a male is also reported by females.

Females cannot be colour blind. Colour blindness is a sex linked issue.


Primitives

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