RE: What's Out There?
July 9, 2015 at 5:51 pm
(This post was last modified: July 9, 2015 at 5:53 pm by Longhorn.)
Well....
When light enters the eye, the image in our retina is upside down and the brain needs to interpret this image right. This is a process that needs to be learned, that's why newborns have vision turned upside down for a short period of time before their eyes and brains adapt
Some people suffer from Print Inverted Reading meaning they can only read if the text is upside down. It's probably caused by the eye's inability to properly process the image
What's fascinating is, we could all see colors differently but call them the same names. Like, your red could look like my blue but we'd both call it red. There are differences in color perception between individual people, men and women in general and I even notice the color temperature varying between my eyes.
but you know, it's late and I don't know shit, so sorry if any of this is wrong ._.
When light enters the eye, the image in our retina is upside down and the brain needs to interpret this image right. This is a process that needs to be learned, that's why newborns have vision turned upside down for a short period of time before their eyes and brains adapt
Some people suffer from Print Inverted Reading meaning they can only read if the text is upside down. It's probably caused by the eye's inability to properly process the image
What's fascinating is, we could all see colors differently but call them the same names. Like, your red could look like my blue but we'd both call it red. There are differences in color perception between individual people, men and women in general and I even notice the color temperature varying between my eyes.
but you know, it's late and I don't know shit, so sorry if any of this is wrong ._.