@@thepoopieshow I'm colourblind and have a somewhat rare to called: "deuteronopia", have never seen purple or.. *NOT GREEN* and probably never will. I don't care really much about the mantis shrimp guarding it with their "pistols/glocks" because I would only just want to see something that you guys normally see. It would be amazing (and impossible)
Yay, I picked the right green box: is it just me, or was it obvious? I'm a little sad to find out that my favorite color doesn't exist, but, the mention of my favorite crustacean did lift my spirits.
I had to move my head at weird angles while keeping my eyes on various squares, I don't know how that worked but I did it instinctively and picked the right one out too. Lol.
It is really interesting how having a vocabulary for certain ideas allows you to think about entirely new concepts in entirely new ways. Sometimes I like to read old science fiction, and you can see an obvious difference in the way people think about information from before the age of personal computers and the internet. It's crazy.
Also traffic light in Japan is not red yellow green but red yellow blue, but it's as green as it gets for international standards while still be called blue in Japanese
Not exactly. Japanese for a long time didn’t have a specific word for green, green was just a shade of blue (Ao). But because language gonna language, even though they now have a word for green(midori) some green things still get called blue. If you want an English example, orange used to just be a shade of red. We did not have a word for orange before the fruit. And even though we now have orange; there are orange things that are still called red. Think red heads. They’re really orange heads a lot of the time.
Is this true? 緑 has its own kanji and everything. Are you suggesting that the introduction of traffic lights predates the introduction of this kanji? Or is there another explanation?
@@x2bountydon’t they add new words in kanji? I know they do cuz there’s a kanji for “when president bush puked on the prime minister”, you know, just to simplify things.
Ah, I think I heard about the bronze sky thing before. Nice to know it isn't as weird as it originally sounded. But yeah, it's interesting to hear about how we physically and mentally perceive colours, and discovering limitations in our perception that we weren't aware of.
about the bronze sky, I did read that ancient greeks might have been talking about brightness rather than color. It's interesting that this might have been what's more important for them to describe
I mean, same, but my partner may as well be colorblind and it was obvious to her, as well. Pretty sure this is just really easy. Like, she's the kind of person that calls the water in a mossy pond filled with green, sludgy undergrowth blue.
I picked the different green almost immediately, and my hypothesis is that it's because I've studied plant identification and worked in Horticulture - where subtle green differences can indicate a different variety of plant or decline in health
I’m not into anything that would have caused me to be able to do that, but i still got it the second she showed the thingy. When i was younger i guess i did play a lot of TH-cam videos that were like “FIND THE DIFFRENT COLOR OR FREDDY FAZBEAR WILL FIND YOU!!” so 🤷♀️
New hypothesis: our culture does actually differentiate different greens like sage green and forest green and I imagine with the internet this knowledge has become more prevalent, maybe the original experiment is inaccurate now?
Wait, but why did I instantly know which green square was different? Color perception is wild though! It’s a joy to play with the light our eyes receive. Cool video!
To me, purple falls in the violet/indigo/blue zone... What doesn't exist is a tone more like pink or magenta, which is when the frequency of light detected by our eyes is like green, but our green cones aren't active, meaning that it isn't the same as green even tho it has similar frequency, which our brain interprets as a different thing for survival reasons.
I only see Blueish Purple on that time mark, but yeah, those tones are already purple to me and probably most of people... The girl on the video probably referred to a pinkier kind of purples
As an artist that knows color theory, working with those psychological tricks is part of the whole schtick. The square puzzle was also really easy, I didn’t need to have a specific term for it to know that the green that was off was more yellow-y.
Those shrimps actually only see 12-16 colors, one per each cone. Their brain cannot create colors by merging signals from different cones, so they need 12-16 of them to have any usable color vision.
wow so do they only see White, Light Gray, Gray, Black, Brown, Red, Orange, Yellow, Lime, Green, Cyan, Light Blue, Blue, Purple, Magenta and Pink? also how do we know they dont merge signals?
@@AmeliaEarhart53756 It just looks like a boring colour. Idrk how to describe it. Could *you* describe what colour the colour red is? [Edit: Best example I could find was this: www.color-blindness.com/wp-content/images/tritanopia-color-spectrum.jpg Not perfect, for me it's mostly green and blue, but other than that it's pretty good.]
@@robiginal Idk, haven't really looked into it much. All I know is that I did a colour blind test multiple times and got the same result every time. Tbh I just thought blue was a boring colour for a long time XD
Purple is in the visible light spectrum though, so long as we're all on the same page that violet is purple. The colour missing from the visible light spectrum is magenta. The visible light spectrum ends in violet, it's why the next wavelength band down is termed 'ultraviolet'. Magenta has no wavelength of its own, and exists only as a combination of red and blue light.
Purple exists because we have classified it and documented shades. It's up to us what exists as a separate color or not, same as with language and the evolution of words and phrases. If you know the specific name for a specific shade, good for you, but purple is as much a color as red. It's not like I'm gonna call out crimson or rose when I look at something red.
tbh the ones in the other corners looked different to me too for some reason even though the top right one was also clearly the differently-coloured one
This was very interesting! Thank you for this information. I will forever use this to tease my brother about how his favorite color doesn't exist. You picked out the different green in the circle of green. 👇
fun fact: mantis shrimp don't actually see all that different from us, they simply just don't have the capabilities of mixing the result of multiple wavelengths of light like we do, so they have extra cones for perceiving each individual color
I was just looking at the purple thing along with stuff like pink and I learned about the not green concept but this video made it so much easier to visualise why and how that happens. The thing I had seen was more like if you turned the colour spectrum into a circle, purple is the part between blue and red if you go the opposite direction from green, which of course isn't within our visible spectrum. I wonder if that's why it's ultraviolet? It would be violet/purple but like true purple that mantis shrimp would see but for us it's not actually visible? And we just get the psychologically invented "purple" our brains concoct? But the chart showing the overlap and how the two don't ever overlap without green was a new way to visualise it that made a lot of sense. Side note: is this why grapes are green or purple? Since the one image showed green and two purple grapes, I wonder if just the pigments reflect a lot of blue and red but then green grapes reflect green also, and red grapes DONT reflect just that one colour and it changes it completely to look purple?
In color research and psychology, we are in children's shoes for so long when we focus only on Indo-European languages. For example, in the Finno-Ugric languages "sinen" (blue) is the oldest word for color and we originally didn't have a word for black, but the Finno-Ugric people called everything that was black blue. For example, the sky is pale blue during the day and dark blue during the night.
I mean, that makes sense since everything in the night is more blue somehow. If it’s not pitch black outside, the last thing you see is shades of blue. Like sunlight is yellow(ish) but fvck knows how, shadows outside are mostly blue too.
For the Greeks, a lot of the color references we have are from poetry so they weren't describing things literally. Bronze is reflective and it was used to describe bright things like the sky.
Magenta is red and blue light mixed together, and violet is blue that gets picked up by our red cone cells. High frequency blue is about twice the frequency of lower red, so our red cone cells are probably reacting to a harmonic of this high frequency blue light. Most cameras probably can't pick up violet light.
I actually picked out the exact lighter green square that was different. However I've always been very sensitive to differences like this, and it likely helps bring a artist that is good with colors as well. You kinda double-mind gamed me because I noticed a immediate difference, went back with doubt when you made the fool joke as if there wasn't and made me second guess myself if my mind was playing tricks on me. Thought I was wrong with the first image being highlighted in blue before educating about how the Tribe would always pick out the correct square that was different which was the one I had originally picked out.
I like this channel, you do a good job. I hope doing it is as helpful as a form of therapy, to get over past events in your life, equal or greater than the entertainment your biggest fans get from your work.
This reminds me of the time in my physics class in high school when we were learning about light and such, my teacher said if you grew up with someone telling you blue is hablahblah you wouldn't call it blue you'd call it hablahblah. Which was a really good example about how we perceive color and how because colors only exist due to how light reflects into our eyes it's entirely relative. Another fact I cam across is that even our own two eyes see colors differently so not only is it different between people but it also varies between the two eyes of a person (so if you ever wondered why if you close one eye and the environment around you looks more yellow while and then you close that one and open the other the world seems blue that's why) Which honestly is kinda interesting to think about
This is quite an Interesting topic, When i was a kid, I'd usually use dark blue and purple for outlines in illustrations and light yellow for stuff that's meant to be white and it feels natural But now i understand why that happens And nowadays i do lots of pixel art with color multipurposing and multiplexing, and i generally use dark cyan and dark green sometimes and purple as dark red, which leds to interesting results
Apparently my favourite colour is a very interesting favourite colour then Thank you for this information, my spirit animals always been humans anyways
It is true that not having words for a thing really limits your way of thinking. My physics teacher went f*** it and teach in English because we don't have different words for mass and weight
Not being able to understand a concept that you don't have a word for is a learned response. It isn't necessary or intrinsic to human thoughts, but is a common function that many people do. That's a big problem with psychology from more than a few decades ago, before neurology revealed more about how our brains actually function and that we are not all built the same.
I actually guessed right! That square was more yellowy. Usually videos gaslight me, “theyre actually all the same.” Not this time ayyyy. Stupid facebook posts T.T
Pear- the color of a pear, to me, is a color that invokes an emotion of adventure, yet not the kind of startling adrenaline. More of, controlled happiness. Like a game of tag in a backyard you would have as a kid. Smelling the grass, feeling the breeze of wind as you run. There’s a certain softness and joy about pear green. Banana- banana yellow has an air of mystery. It’s bright and captures attention, yet it doesn’t scream. More of a bellowing echo. People often associate yellow with joy, and I don’t really know why. Perhaps it’s “bright”, which is true, but it strikes me more as if a person was hiding in plain sight, in a room full of clowns. Apple- Apple red. Red is powerful. It’s used to represent anger and love. Two very powerful emotions. In a way, it came be like a warm hug or a blazing furnace. It can be used to indicate danger, or to show love. Red is bold. Red is not shy. Red can be classy, or in the past could be scandalous for a woman to wear. Red is an opposing, and opinionated color. Blueberries- Blueberries are well, blue. But a blue so mesmerizing and alluring that it’s like looking into a deep ocean and feeling the smooth water surrounding you. Almost as it’s singing you a lullaby. Blueberries are a darker blue, not like what people call “sky blue.” No, blueberries are darker than that. But not so dark that it would be associated with fear. Just a sweet dream as you drift off into rem. Oranges- another very creative fruit name- oranges are bright, and in most cases, bright orange is the most popular form of orange (aside from when fall rolls around) it is used in construction to capture attention, it can be described as another “warm” color. But it’s not as intense as red. Sure it’s a bold color, but not like red. Orange is different. Orange is… punchy. Just like citrus. It’s unexpected in a way of “oh!” But not like a scream of fear or joy. Now, these are just my opinions but I think most people would agree that Orange isn’t as aggressive as red, or not as unexpected as yellow. It’s like a neighborhood who stopped by unannounced, and as you open your door to leave, you see them there. A surprise, but not totally “out there.”
Can i just say…I love your voice, it’s cute and pleasant to listen to. Also, nice art style…it’s pretty cool. Have a nice day ^^ also, purple is wonderful 💜
More _magenta_ than just "purple". Purple is far enough into blue that it will get a tiny bit of green cone response. But the way the cones work is that they give the _strongest_ response for one particular wavelength; they're "tuned" to that wavelength. It may be slightly different from person to person, but it'll be close enough to somewhere in the "reddish", "greenish", and "bluish" areas of the spectrum. And the further from that peak response wavelength in *either* direction, the lower the response. So for example, the Green cone may give the strongest response at ~530nm, going towards either cyan _or_ yellow will result in lower signal sent to the brain. So how does the brain know which way the signal is falling off towards? By comparing it to the signal from *other* cones. If the signal from Green is falling off, but the signal from Red is stronger and Blue is not responding at all yet, then the brain knows that the Green cone is falling off towards longer wavelengths; towards Yellow. And then by comparing the signal strength of Green cones to the signal strength of Red, it can figure out about where in that yellow to orange range the color is. Conversely, if the Red signal is getting weaker along with the Green, but Blue is getting stronger, that means it fell off in the other direction, towards Cyan. And again, the brain figures out what color from blue-green, through cyan, blue, and purple the color is. Now normally, your eyes wouldn't really "get" strong signals from *only* Red and Blue, but _not_ Green... *unless* it's getting individual signals mixed together from Red mixed with Blue. Say, for example, Red pixels mixed with Blue pixels, but with no Green pixels. What the brain is trying to do there is figure out how to perceive a color that the cones are telling it has a *longer* wavelength than Red light... but _simultaneously_ has a *shorter* wavelength than Blue light. Logically, we know that's impossible, but the visual cortex _still_ needs to provide an answer for a perceptual experience, and it isn't exactly equipped with advanced logical analysis. So it just sorta... short-circuits and that perception is what we've named "Magenta" in English.
0:13 Fun fact: Before the fruit (and the tree they get their name from) were introduced to the West, the color orange was called "geoluread". Literally just 'yellow-red'. 0:20 I thought that was just magenta. Wild. 0:41 Woot! Spotted the different square immediately! 1:57 The science is in! It's black and blue. People with UV damage to their eyes mistake it for being white and gold. Color fact bonus: There's a test to determine how good someone is at distinguishing color values called the Farnsworth-Munsell test. The scoring is like golf; the lower your score, the better you are at it. And the test even accounts for aging as our eyes get worse at distinguishing colors as we age. [My score is a 0 for my own age, and a 6 for two age categories down. Turns out my color vision is better than that of people less than half my age.]
Colors are helpful descriptors as words and literal emotional triggers and identities of more mild precise light frequencies Red naturally triggers an abundance of emotions, because neurologically you recognize red as blood, blush, fruit, and the gap between day and night. It triggers emotions of fear, anger, passion, happiness, and relaxation depending on the context and the intensity. Blue and green are neurologically treated very similarly for some reason, and languages often only have one word for both for a very long time. They are processed as calm, motivating, grounding, and pleasantry. Both colors feel rejuvenating as they are colors of life, and are rarely dangerous unless on a mammal. Blue and green also give off a sense of melancholy, especially for those in urban areas, and especially for blue, as they are the colors of the environment and feel empty and alone when not accompanied by other life. Purple is so extremely uncommon naturally that it's just processed as red and blue, and varies in how it's processed, and mostly just is recognized as intense as it's more common in bruising than anywhere else. Orange, yellow, and red also are all processed as passionate and lively, the type of passion depends on the person, such as anger, lust, love, and happiness. For some reason yellow is distinctly platonic atleast in English cultures Tints and shades just intensify or nullify the emotions of other things, white and black both feel empty, but black feels dangerous and white feels sterile, because that's what they are in nature. This is also why both are culturally significant in life and death because inherently both colors are associated with them (bones, darkness, light, sickly skin, rotting flesh) Most other colors usually are treated as a mix of shade, tint, and how much blue green and red are in them or whatever personal association someone has with them Personal associations also impacts color emotional perceptions more than the built in or natural perception. Green nowadays is often used to represent greed, so is yellow or gold Blue often is specifically sadness or masculinity, pink is often specifically love or femininity, etc Also purple is a good color
I saw the square instantly due to graphic design work. Mantis Shrimp DNA would be helpful in that job, if you could isolate the DNA responsible for more colors.
Im tired of this anti purple propaganda
😂 I'll die on this hill with u bro!
This is our Alamo
Purple is Epic!!!
Purple is awesome
Purple is elegant
Now I'm angry at colors. Good morning Poopie!
we need to redirect that anger towards the lackofgreenberries.
@@thepoopieshowindubitably
@@thepoopieshow I'm colourblind and have a somewhat rare to called: "deuteronopia", have never seen purple or.. *NOT GREEN* and probably never will. I don't care really much about the mantis shrimp guarding it with their "pistols/glocks" because I would only just want to see something that you guys normally see. It would be amazing (and impossible)
@@thepoopieshowyes
Yay, I picked the right green box: is it just me, or was it obvious? I'm a little sad to find out that my favorite color doesn't exist, but, the mention of my favorite crustacean did lift my spirits.
nice one on the green, purple is pretty special though, bc it does exist just only in our brain
I had to move my head at weird angles while keeping my eyes on various squares, I don't know how that worked but I did it instinctively and picked the right one out too. Lol.
I also got it correct yipeee
All colors exist only in our brains. “Color” is not a physical property of light, wavelength is.
My favorite crustacean is the rubber ducky isopod personally
mantis shrimp protecting purple with his pistol hands
this is what will bring down civilization one day.
@@thepoopieshowerm actually! I was gonna bring down civilization first!
@@thepoopieshow*_RACE YA_*
It's changing the *Hollow Purple* 💀
I saw that as mantis lords, I gotta stop playing hollow knight
It is really interesting how having a vocabulary for certain ideas allows you to think about entirely new concepts in entirely new ways. Sometimes I like to read old science fiction, and you can see an obvious difference in the way people think about information from before the age of personal computers and the internet. It's crazy.
Valet and ultraviolet are wavelengths duh
@@supme7558
wtf? Yes? Okay? Did you accidentally respond to the wrong comment?
someone get a map, this guy lost himself in the sea of comments, lol
Also traffic light in Japan is not red yellow green but red yellow blue, but it's as green as it gets for international standards while still be called blue in Japanese
Not exactly. Japanese for a long time didn’t have a specific word for green, green was just a shade of blue (Ao). But because language gonna language, even though they now have a word for green(midori) some green things still get called blue.
If you want an English example, orange used to just be a shade of red. We did not have a word for orange before the fruit. And even though we now have orange; there are orange things that are still called red. Think red heads. They’re really orange heads a lot of the time.
Is this true? 緑 has its own kanji and everything. Are you suggesting that the introduction of traffic lights predates the introduction of this kanji? Or is there another explanation?
And green apples are blue as well.
@@x2bounty I don't really know why, but like, even green leaves are also called blue a lot of the time so yeah idk the reason.
@@x2bountydon’t they add new words in kanji?
I know they do cuz there’s a kanji for “when president bush puked on the prime minister”, you know, just to simplify things.
Ah, I think I heard about the bronze sky thing before. Nice to know it isn't as weird as it originally sounded. But yeah, it's interesting to hear about how we physically and mentally perceive colours, and discovering limitations in our perception that we weren't aware of.
about the bronze sky, I did read that ancient greeks might have been talking about brightness rather than color. It's interesting that this might have been what's more important for them to describe
As an artist I immediately saw a standout square.
SAME!!
I mean, same, but my partner may as well be colorblind and it was obvious to her, as well. Pretty sure this is just really easy.
Like, she's the kind of person that calls the water in a mossy pond filled with green, sludgy undergrowth blue.
I’m not a visual artist (I’m a musician), but I still found it after a few seconds
same lol
i saw a magenta colour
turns out all colour is just a complicated Safe class SCP
Lol fr
Scp 7800 ex, it really is
ourple
I picked the different green almost immediately, and my hypothesis is that it's because I've studied plant identification and worked in Horticulture - where subtle green differences can indicate a different variety of plant or decline in health
I’m not into anything that would have caused me to be able to do that, but i still got it the second she showed the thingy. When i was younger i guess i did play a lot of TH-cam videos that were like “FIND THE DIFFRENT COLOR OR FREDDY FAZBEAR WILL FIND YOU!!” so 🤷♀️
I did too, and I have 0 relevant background. I think it's probably just genetics.
Me too. I like art though lol
New hypothesis: our culture does actually differentiate different greens like sage green and forest green and I imagine with the internet this knowledge has become more prevalent, maybe the original experiment is inaccurate now?
I'm only 16 and don't got that going on and I got it
growing up my favorite color had always been purple, now it’s brown but purple still holds a special place in my heart
Brown does not exist. It's just dark orange.
@@McSenkel Orange does not exist. It's just dark yellow
@@kotakotik22More like a hue shifted yellow
@@McSenkel it’s funny because i actually hate orange
Pink does not exist it’s just purple but 3x lighter
Other people: PURPLE ISN'T A COLOR!?!?
The fnaf side of my brain: How does William feel about this? Being the purple guy and all
Plot Twist: William was a shrimp all along.
fun fact there is a shade of yellow named "lemon". so oranges and blueberries aren't alone in being named after a colour.
Out of these only blueberries were named after a color. Both lemons and oranges had their name before their respective colors
There’s also the lime fruit.
Orange was the name of the fruit before the color. The color orange was originally called "yellowred."
@@orangeismyfavoritecolor ah, now _this_ is a source i trust
@@orangeismyfavoritecolor it was the name of the tree before the fruit
It's the color out of space starring Nicholas Cage
Wait, but why did I instantly know which green square was different? Color perception is wild though! It’s a joy to play with the light our eyes receive. Cool video!
To me, purple falls in the violet/indigo/blue zone...
What doesn't exist is a tone more like pink or magenta, which is when the frequency of light detected by our eyes is like green, but our green cones aren't active, meaning that it isn't the same as green even tho it has similar frequency, which our brain interprets as a different thing for survival reasons.
exactly, literally 2:32 it is written that violet is around 410 nm
I only see Blueish Purple on that time mark, but yeah, those tones are already purple to me and probably most of people... The girl on the video probably referred to a pinkier kind of purples
wow my favourite colour is one that only i and other green-coned individuals can percieve
As an artist that knows color theory, working with those psychological tricks is part of the whole schtick. The square puzzle was also really easy, I didn’t need to have a specific term for it to know that the green that was off was more yellow-y.
Those shrimps actually only see 12-16 colors, one per each cone. Their brain cannot create colors by merging signals from different cones, so they need 12-16 of them to have any usable color vision.
Inefficient.
interesting
wow so do they only see White, Light Gray, Gray, Black, Brown, Red, Orange, Yellow, Lime, Green, Cyan, Light Blue, Blue, Purple, Magenta and Pink?
also how do we know they dont merge signals?
0:08 As somebody who is colour blind towards blue, this is partially an impossible task for me lmao
How come?
Tritanopia?@@robiginal
What color does blue look like to you?
@@AmeliaEarhart53756 It just looks like a boring colour. Idrk how to describe it. Could *you* describe what colour the colour red is?
[Edit: Best example I could find was this:
www.color-blindness.com/wp-content/images/tritanopia-color-spectrum.jpg
Not perfect, for me it's mostly green and blue, but other than that it's pretty good.]
@@robiginal Idk, haven't really looked into it much. All I know is that I did a colour blind test multiple times and got the same result every time. Tbh I just thought blue was a boring colour for a long time XD
Faline san would be very glad to hear that purple is “not green.” (She made a whole video on why she believes green is the absolute worst)
Faline and the poopie show I think would get along well.
I saw that we have the exact same gamer girl pink razer mic, I think we could
@@thepoopieshow ‘twas fate which brought all here, clearly.
Purple is in the visible light spectrum though, so long as we're all on the same page that violet is purple. The colour missing from the visible light spectrum is magenta. The visible light spectrum ends in violet, it's why the next wavelength band down is termed 'ultraviolet'. Magenta has no wavelength of its own, and exists only as a combination of red and blue light.
When you mentioned mantis shrimp I was so happy just cause they’re my favorite animal.
Purple exists because we have classified it and documented shades. It's up to us what exists as a separate color or not, same as with language and the evolution of words and phrases. If you know the specific name for a specific shade, good for you, but purple is as much a color as red. It's not like I'm gonna call out crimson or rose when I look at something red.
Imaginary Technique: Hollow Purple
Adorable and educational with a dash of rage.
1:08 - 1:15 made me actually laugh out loud. Freud seemed so eager to butt in 😂
yeah I have ongoing beef w frued on this channel >:~(
@@thepoopieshowit’s universal to hate Freud
@@HecateofcrossroadsI like him :(
It took me half a second to spot the green one out. Now i want to know how just how much better that makes me compared to all the peasants.
Does anyone else feel dumb for not seeing the difference?
Me
tbh the ones in the other corners looked different to me too for some reason even though the top right one was also clearly the differently-coloured one
i spotted the green in an instant
Love that Purple is just the lack of green, and a brain poop.
No wonder ppl who love purple are crazy about it... like me. XD
This was very interesting! Thank you for this information. I will forever use this to tease my brother about how his favorite color doesn't exist.
You picked out the different green in the circle of green.
👇
fun fact: mantis shrimp don't actually see all that different from us, they simply just don't have the capabilities of mixing the result of multiple wavelengths of light like we do, so they have extra cones for perceiving each individual color
if we had that kinda system, we'd probably be able to perceive more colors
I was just looking at the purple thing along with stuff like pink and I learned about the not green concept but this video made it so much easier to visualise why and how that happens. The thing I had seen was more like if you turned the colour spectrum into a circle, purple is the part between blue and red if you go the opposite direction from green, which of course isn't within our visible spectrum. I wonder if that's why it's ultraviolet? It would be violet/purple but like true purple that mantis shrimp would see but for us it's not actually visible? And we just get the psychologically invented "purple" our brains concoct? But the chart showing the overlap and how the two don't ever overlap without green was a new way to visualise it that made a lot of sense.
Side note: is this why grapes are green or purple? Since the one image showed green and two purple grapes, I wonder if just the pigments reflect a lot of blue and red but then green grapes reflect green also, and red grapes DONT reflect just that one colour and it changes it completely to look purple?
**cries in colorblindness**
In color research and psychology, we are in children's shoes for so long when we focus only on Indo-European languages. For example, in the Finno-Ugric languages "sinen" (blue) is the oldest word for color and we originally didn't have a word for black, but the Finno-Ugric people called everything that was black blue. For example, the sky is pale blue during the day and dark blue during the night.
I mean, that makes sense since everything in the night is more blue somehow. If it’s not pitch black outside, the last thing you see is shades of blue. Like sunlight is yellow(ish) but fvck knows how, shadows outside are mostly blue too.
I feel very big brain for spotting the square that was different.
why did i get the green circle of squares right IM NOT APART OF THAT TRIBE I PROMISE!
These videos give me a Salmonella Academy vibe
Beautiful
Color inversion on the purple color you used on the thumbnail comes out as the same color, which I thought was neat, and confuzzling.
For the Greeks, a lot of the color references we have are from poetry so they weren't describing things literally. Bronze is reflective and it was used to describe bright things like the sky.
Negation as part of contrast is pretty essential, the way I see it.
3:10 STOP YOU’RE BLINDING ME WITH THAT DAMN YELLOW
For nexts years holloween im going to turn magenta.
Nothing special about me but I feel like a genius for spotting the *deluxe* green square.
You underestimate my power to spot color differences.
1:10 this happened right as my dad walked in
Magenta is red and blue light mixed together, and violet is blue that gets picked up by our red cone cells. High frequency blue is about twice the frequency of lower red, so our red cone cells are probably reacting to a harmonic of this high frequency blue light. Most cameras probably can't pick up violet light.
jokes on you, i see it as purple
I actually picked out the exact lighter green square that was different.
However I've always been very sensitive to differences like this, and it likely helps bring a artist that is good with colors as well.
You kinda double-mind gamed me because I noticed a immediate difference, went back with doubt when you made the fool joke as if there wasn't and made me second guess myself if my mind was playing tricks on me. Thought I was wrong with the first image being highlighted in blue before educating about how the Tribe would always pick out the correct square that was different which was the one I had originally picked out.
I like this channel, you do a good job. I hope doing it is as helpful as a form of therapy, to get over past events in your life, equal or greater than the entertainment your biggest fans get from your work.
Brown being dark orange still makes my brain itchy.
I love the energy of this video. It’s like “I have a PHD and I’m going to use it to prove a silly point that bothers me.”
This reminds me of the time in my physics class in high school when we were learning about light and such, my teacher said if you grew up with someone telling you blue is hablahblah you wouldn't call it blue you'd call it hablahblah. Which was a really good example about how we perceive color and how because colors only exist due to how light reflects into our eyes it's entirely relative. Another fact I cam across is that even our own two eyes see colors differently so not only is it different between people but it also varies between the two eyes of a person (so if you ever wondered why if you close one eye and the environment around you looks more yellow while and then you close that one and open the other the world seems blue that's why) Which honestly is kinda interesting to think about
Even when i watched a video before. I will watch it again. You are very entertaining. Thank you.
this means a lot :'~)
the real question is...what is the colour brown exactly?
Dark orange usually ?
2 complementary colours mixed together
Poopie!
My favorite.
Dark yellow
i love this style
Figuring out the green squares thing was actually kinda obvious lol
that differently green square was pretty easy to spot, I wonder what the stats are on how many people find it
green is my favorite color, therefore purple is now my least favorite color.... wait, what?
This is quite an Interesting topic, When i was a kid, I'd usually use dark blue and purple for outlines in illustrations and light yellow for stuff that's meant to be white and it feels natural
But now i understand why that happens
And nowadays i do lots of pixel art with color multipurposing and multiplexing, and i generally use dark cyan and dark green sometimes and purple as dark red, which leds to interesting results
Purple is like my army of Genshin Impact husbandos, I don’t care if it’s real or not, I love it!😭💔
Honestly, we haven’t discovered if we all see colors the same. My red could be your orange or smth
Apparently my favourite colour is a very interesting favourite colour then
Thank you for this information, my spirit animals always been humans anyways
It is true that not having words for a thing really limits your way of thinking. My physics teacher went f*** it and teach in English because we don't have different words for mass and weight
I picked the right box and I seriously can’t be the only one who thought it was a lil off, right?
Ngl, i was trying for a hot minute to see which green was different before remembering i am color blind...
I feel like we are all colorblind if animals can see more than 100 spectrums of colors
1:00 I'm from the tribe too then, I guess?
let's go?
@@thepoopieshow”lets… go? lets fkin.. go?”
This was cute.
Subbed.
I did not expect to walk out of here convinced that purple isn't real
I also remember finding that far blue (blue without green) is perceived as having some red
Magenta, under purple umbrella
As well as, magenta being mix of purple and pink
Not being able to understand a concept that you don't have a word for is a learned response. It isn't necessary or intrinsic to human thoughts, but is a common function that many people do. That's a big problem with psychology from more than a few decades ago, before neurology revealed more about how our brains actually function and that we are not all built the same.
I actually guessed right! That square was more yellowy. Usually videos gaslight me, “theyre actually all the same.” Not this time ayyyy. Stupid facebook posts T.T
24 Quaternary hues are Red, Vermillion, Orange, Amber, Yellow, Becquerel, Chartreuse, Lime, Green, Emerald, Mint, Turquoise, Cyan, Capri, Azure, Cerulean, Blue, Indigo, Violet, Purple, Magenta, Fuchsia, Rose, and Ruby.
Pear- the color of a pear, to me, is a color that invokes an emotion of adventure, yet not the kind of startling adrenaline. More of, controlled happiness. Like a game of tag in a backyard you would have as a kid. Smelling the grass, feeling the breeze of wind as you run. There’s a certain softness and joy about pear green.
Banana- banana yellow has an air of mystery. It’s bright and captures attention, yet it doesn’t scream. More of a bellowing echo. People often associate yellow with joy, and I don’t really know why. Perhaps it’s “bright”, which is true, but it strikes me more as if a person was hiding in plain sight, in a room full of clowns.
Apple- Apple red. Red is powerful. It’s used to represent anger and love. Two very powerful emotions. In a way, it came be like a warm hug or a blazing furnace. It can be used to indicate danger, or to show love. Red is bold. Red is not shy. Red can be classy, or in the past could be scandalous for a woman to wear. Red is an opposing, and opinionated color.
Blueberries- Blueberries are well, blue. But a blue so mesmerizing and alluring that it’s like looking into a deep ocean and feeling the smooth water surrounding you. Almost as it’s singing you a lullaby. Blueberries are a darker blue, not like what people call “sky blue.” No, blueberries are darker than that. But not so dark that it would be associated with fear. Just a sweet dream as you drift off into rem.
Oranges- another very creative fruit name- oranges are bright, and in most cases, bright orange is the most popular form of orange (aside from when fall rolls around) it is used in construction to capture attention, it can be described as another “warm” color. But it’s not as intense as red. Sure it’s a bold color, but not like red. Orange is different. Orange is… punchy. Just like citrus. It’s unexpected in a way of “oh!” But not like a scream of fear or joy. Now, these are just my opinions but I think most people would agree that Orange isn’t as aggressive as red, or not as unexpected as yellow. It’s like a neighborhood who stopped by unannounced, and as you open your door to leave, you see them there. A surprise, but not totally “out there.”
Seeing that green is my least favorite color, I see this as an absolute win.
She's like mini game theory.
one of those rare gem youtubes you stumble upon
purple was discovered in a lab accidentally by someone, but it just turn out to be green without green lol
The fact that I’m literally about to dye my hair not green is crazy
Jokes on you, Poopie, I saw the odd green out immediately.
2:34 thanks for my Vietnam flashback
*remembers of all don't hug me I'm scared shit* oh I'm traumatized.... Again
I'm learning in art that what we percive as black shades are actually different hues, and it's so confusing!
"Do you see why I'm angry?"
Yes now I am too
Oh! I've also spotted the right green square! I just wasn't sure, but it seemed to be slightly different
Guys why is a child smarter than me
Can i just say…I love your voice, it’s cute and pleasant to listen to. Also, nice art style…it’s pretty cool.
Have a nice day ^^ also, purple is wonderful 💜
You know the green squares at the beginning? I found the different shade immediately😅
the purple still looks like purple when inverted :0
OP: no freud
Also OP: phalic bananas, phalic bananas everywhere
Picked out the green. As a theatrical-scenic painter, I would be just a little dissapointed if I couldn't color match
Purple can't hurt you, it's not real.
(The absence of green manifesting behind me)
Does that also mean, Ultraviolet light is just hyper active Green light??
More _magenta_ than just "purple". Purple is far enough into blue that it will get a tiny bit of green cone response. But the way the cones work is that they give the _strongest_ response for one particular wavelength; they're "tuned" to that wavelength. It may be slightly different from person to person, but it'll be close enough to somewhere in the "reddish", "greenish", and "bluish" areas of the spectrum. And the further from that peak response wavelength in *either* direction, the lower the response. So for example, the Green cone may give the strongest response at ~530nm, going towards either cyan _or_ yellow will result in lower signal sent to the brain. So how does the brain know which way the signal is falling off towards? By comparing it to the signal from *other* cones. If the signal from Green is falling off, but the signal from Red is stronger and Blue is not responding at all yet, then the brain knows that the Green cone is falling off towards longer wavelengths; towards Yellow. And then by comparing the signal strength of Green cones to the signal strength of Red, it can figure out about where in that yellow to orange range the color is. Conversely, if the Red signal is getting weaker along with the Green, but Blue is getting stronger, that means it fell off in the other direction, towards Cyan. And again, the brain figures out what color from blue-green, through cyan, blue, and purple the color is.
Now normally, your eyes wouldn't really "get" strong signals from *only* Red and Blue, but _not_ Green... *unless* it's getting individual signals mixed together from Red mixed with Blue. Say, for example, Red pixels mixed with Blue pixels, but with no Green pixels. What the brain is trying to do there is figure out how to perceive a color that the cones are telling it has a *longer* wavelength than Red light... but _simultaneously_ has a *shorter* wavelength than Blue light. Logically, we know that's impossible, but the visual cortex _still_ needs to provide an answer for a perceptual experience, and it isn't exactly equipped with advanced logical analysis. So it just sorta... short-circuits and that perception is what we've named "Magenta" in English.
Not green is such a nice color. Especially the Not green lilac version.
0:13 Fun fact: Before the fruit (and the tree they get their name from) were introduced to the West, the color orange was called "geoluread". Literally just 'yellow-red'.
0:20 I thought that was just magenta. Wild.
0:41 Woot! Spotted the different square immediately!
1:57 The science is in! It's black and blue. People with UV damage to their eyes mistake it for being white and gold.
Color fact bonus: There's a test to determine how good someone is at distinguishing color values called the Farnsworth-Munsell test. The scoring is like golf; the lower your score, the better you are at it. And the test even accounts for aging as our eyes get worse at distinguishing colors as we age.
[My score is a 0 for my own age, and a 6 for two age categories down. Turns out my color vision is better than that of people less than half my age.]
I found out the green square immediately lol
Colors are helpful descriptors as words and literal emotional triggers and identities of more mild precise light frequencies
Red naturally triggers an abundance of emotions, because neurologically you recognize red as blood, blush, fruit, and the gap between day and night. It triggers emotions of fear, anger, passion, happiness, and relaxation depending on the context and the intensity.
Blue and green are neurologically treated very similarly for some reason, and languages often only have one word for both for a very long time. They are processed as calm, motivating, grounding, and pleasantry. Both colors feel rejuvenating as they are colors of life, and are rarely dangerous unless on a mammal. Blue and green also give off a sense of melancholy, especially for those in urban areas, and especially for blue, as they are the colors of the environment and feel empty and alone when not accompanied by other life.
Purple is so extremely uncommon naturally that it's just processed as red and blue, and varies in how it's processed, and mostly just is recognized as intense as it's more common in bruising than anywhere else.
Orange, yellow, and red also are all processed as passionate and lively, the type of passion depends on the person, such as anger, lust, love, and happiness. For some reason yellow is distinctly platonic atleast in English cultures
Tints and shades just intensify or nullify the emotions of other things, white and black both feel empty, but black feels dangerous and white feels sterile, because that's what they are in nature. This is also why both are culturally significant in life and death because inherently both colors are associated with them (bones, darkness, light, sickly skin, rotting flesh)
Most other colors usually are treated as a mix of shade, tint, and how much blue green and red are in them or whatever personal association someone has with them
Personal associations also impacts color emotional perceptions more than the built in or natural perception. Green nowadays is often used to represent greed, so is yellow or gold
Blue often is specifically sadness or masculinity, pink is often specifically love or femininity, etc
Also purple is a good color
I saw the square instantly due to graphic design work. Mantis Shrimp DNA would be helpful in that job, if you could isolate the DNA responsible for more colors.