|
Most people see pink, red and two shades of
green. Look closer and you will see there is only one shade of green and one of
red in the picture.
The colour you see depends on which other
colours are surrounding it. Here, green next to red looks much darker than green
next to white.
This effect seems to be due to ‘lateral
inhibition’. This is the mechanism that your eye and brain uses to make edges,
outlines and colours more distinct. About 90% of this effect is due to cells in
your eye.
This effect has been used for thousands of
years by carpet makers to make apparently multi-coloured carpets from just a
handful of different wools.
|