Why Everyone Sees Color a Little Differently

  1. Color Wiring: People have slightly different numbers of cone cells, altering perception.
  2. Personal Palette: Eye shape and lens clarity affect color sensitivity.
  3. Brain Bias: Emotions and expectations shift how each person sees color.
  4. Light Filters: Indoor, outdoor, and artificial lighting change perceived hues.
  5. Age Tint: Aging lenses add a subtle yellow filter to vision.
  6. Genetic Tones: Genes influence how vivid colors appear to you.
  7. Memory Match: You compare colors to remembered shades, not absolute ones.
  8. Culture Colors: Cultural experience shapes color naming and recognition.
  9. Cone Variants: Some people have extra cones, making them β€œsuper color perceivers.”
  10. Unique Vision: No two people see a color in exactly the same way.