• 404@lemmy.zip
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    1 day ago

    Fun fact! Since we (primates) have three cone cell types, we only really see three colours (red, green, blue). The rest are illusions. Some animals, like some fish and birds, have four or five cone cell types.

    This means that for animals that have a cone cell type for yellow, a sunflower displayed on an LCD screen will not have the same color as a real sunflower. The screen will show a mixture of red and green (which we perceive as yellow) but it won’t actually be yellow.

    • notabot@piefed.social
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      21 hours ago

      Mantis shrimps seem to be the champions of this. They have between 12 and 16 different types of cones, spanning into the ultraviolet. They have a very different visual processing system to most animals though, so despite all the cones, they don’t seem to synthesise shades between them, so they probably don’t have a very vivid image.

    • Viceversa@lemmy.world
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      21 hours ago

      It’s more complicated than that. Colours are not some discrete things, it’s a spectra. Even one colour is a bunch of wavelengths.

      So in truth each eye cone of ours perceives a spectrum.

    • tuxiqae@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 day ago

      But real sunflowers are (and correct me if I’m wrong) yellow colored, so why LCD screens don’t do tue same thing? Is it because they are based upon RGB? If so, that kinda feels like an issue with screens and not with our lack of cones