The difference in what we saw was down to the way our brains filter light and if we are more accustomed to processing indoor or outdoor light.
US neuroscientist Dr Bevil Conway, from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said people who perceive white and gold stripes may be more attuned to daylight while those who see a black and blue dress are more accustomed to indoor lighting.
The brains of "brown and blue" individuals were likely to fall in a bracket somewhere between.
His was one of three papers addressing The Dress enigma published in the journal Current Biology
The brains of "brown and blue" individuals were likely to fall in a bracket somewhere between.
He said: "The big open question is what causes these differences in the population.Dr Conway also found that perception differed by age and sex. Older people and women were more likely to report seeing white and gold, while a larger proportion of younger people saw black and blue.
His was one of three papers addressing The Dress enigma published in the journal Current Biology
Good thing dis hs been clerified
ReplyDeleteMe still dey see brown (gold) and light purple
ReplyDeleteLol.. Them no research your own colorcolour
DeleteDrink hypo na
DeleteHmmm hypo too small try alumo
DeleteTry miz am wif ogidiga abi nah monkey tal...ya eye go clear chapally...
DeleteIssues of life...
ReplyDeleteNa them sabi sha. Me I know wetin I dey see! Lol
ReplyDeleteHmmm,,ok interesting education ...
ReplyDeleteOk nao
ReplyDeletemake dem forget this matter.. why dem no go ask who do the clothes
ReplyDeleteLol.. Nice one!
Delete