• Jarix@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    This is really dumb. You only find me 2 options i dont agree with either one. Should be green teal tourquoise and blue as options.

  • Bongles@lemm.ee
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    7 hours ago

    I tried it on both of my monitors and it was wildly different. Clearly my main monitor is a little too blue

  • julianwgs
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    19 hours ago

    This is cool, however I don’t like that the result is a fixed value. I don’t think a person could take this test and reliably get the same result. This would be a good situation to use a logistic regression.

  • 0ops@lemm.ee
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    1 day ago

    I think that contrast is a big part of this that isn’t really controlled for. During the test, the colors took up my whole screen, so against the black bezel of my phone in my dimly lit room they seemed to look more blue. But at the end when it says “For you, turquoise [color swatch] is blue”, that color swatch was against a white background, and in that context it looked more green to me.

    • fluxion@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      177 hue, bluer than 75% for me.

      I wonder if sitting in front of a blue-hued monitor a lot has an effect? Default color temps tend to skew pretty blue

      • Valmond@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        176 here, the screen is surely doing a part, also environing colors do change the perception too.

      • ganksy@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        I was 177 too! It makes perfect sense that it should be at the middle of the two colors not buried in green.

  • Prandom_returns@lemm.ee
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    2 days ago

    Weirdly, it’s nothing to do with how color forms in our brain (the actual ‘my blue your blue’ thing), only what we call it. So it’s mainly semantics.

    Cool website nevertheless.

  • HonoraryMancunian@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    177 first try, 176 second. By the last frame each time I had to really think hard whether it was bluey-green or greeny-blue

      • federal reverse@feddit.org
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        20 hours ago

        The funny thing about colors is that they’re largely defined in culture and you only see different colors if you’ve been educated to see them. In China and I believe also in most other East Asian cultures, blue and green are traditionally regarded as the same thing.

        • Swedneck
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          19 hours ago

          small correction: everyone sees basically the same colours (barring stuff like colour blindness), what changes is whether we consider it a colour. Brown is the best example, most people consider it a separate colour but it’s just orange with brighter stuff around it.