This site is dedicated to a community of life-long learners. Our weblog serves as a safe place to share challenges, questions, ideas, successes, and whatever springs up in our journey ahead. May we find support, validation, and inspiration from each other.



Thursday, June 24, 2010

brain power torweds color


How does the brain perceives color? I chose this topic because many people always see color around them and never give it a second thought. I want to learn more about what kind of color does the brain perceive.

I found that we don't really see the world. oure brain constructs the world that we see. no two people's brain perceive the identical color the same.
my research items is the Internet. my data base is Google. my article is from http://www.horrorseek.com/home/halloween/wolfstone/Lighting/colvis_ColorVision.html.

we don't See the real world but oure brain makes us have a strong belief that we actually see what we see. "The brain can be tricked." the reason for this is that color doesn't really exist in nature.
I learned that the brain doesn't really perceive towreds what we see as the acteual color in exsistens. we have three different light receptors, they are Beta, Gamma, and Rho. all the light in the wavelenth interacts with at lest with one of the light receptors.

4 comments:

  1. I honestly think that people think whatever they want to think. but that is just my opinion.

    ReplyDelete
  2. So if the world isn't color, and our brain is telling us to see what it wants. Does this mean that there could be things in this room that we cannot see because our brain doesn't want to? Like could there actually be a tiger right next to me, but since my brain doesn't want to see it, then its not there?

    ReplyDelete