Scientists claim to have found colour no one has seen before

(theguardian.com)

42 points | by donatj 17 hours ago

13 comments

  • mrob 16 hours ago
    Anybody who's taken psychedelic drugs has likely seen this color already. Overlapping sensitivity of the cone cells doesn't matter when the image is generated without light. Psychedelic visuals are full of impossibly saturated colors.

    You can also approximate this effect by tiring out some of the cone cells by staring at a bright area of saturated color, then looking at a different color. See:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impossible_color#Chimerical_co...

    • JKCalhoun 16 hours ago
      I was going to suggest perhaps auras — people who see these (associated with migraines).
  • echoangle 17 hours ago
    So basically, the sensitivity curves of the receptors in the eye overlap ( https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Cone-fundamentals-... ) so a signal can’t excite a single type of receptor, but they did it by using a focused laser to exclusively target the one type of receptor?
  • perihelions 17 hours ago
    This is fascinating. I didn't realize there are so few cone cells, that you can step through literally *all* of them with a digital controller.

    - "These laser microdoses are delivered at a rate of 10⁵ per second to a population of 10³ cones[...] individually fiber-coupled acousto-optic modulator that can modulate laser intensity up to 50 MHz[...] This laser spot is scanned in a raster pattern over a 0.9° square field of view using orthogonally oriented resonant and galvo mirrors, with a frame resolution of 512 × 256 pixels and a frame rate of 60 Hz..."

    https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.adu1052

    • zdimension 16 hours ago
      About 90 millions rods vs 6 millions cones. Sometimes I'm surprised we can even see detail at all. Though it certainly helps that they're not uniformly distributed; most cones are in the macula, around the middle of the back of the eye. Still, it's not a lot.
      • woleium 14 hours ago
        And within the macula, the red and green are generally towards the centre and the blue are generally towards the edge. This helps prevent the red shift problem photographs with high contrast changes sometimes get.
      • valleyer 16 hours ago
        This is the basis of chroma subsampling (like the common 4:2:0, 2 chroma samples for every 8 luma samples) in encoded video.
    • layer8 16 hours ago
      They didn’t literally step through all of them though (only a patch “about twice the size of a full moon”), and I’m not sure if they even stimulated all M cones within that patch.
      • perihelions 13 hours ago
        Ah, mea culpa then. The other commenter says there's 6 million cone cells, which is a much larger number than the 1,000 in this experiment.
      • everybodyknows 11 hours ago
        A comparison of interest then is the area of that patch relative to the fovea.
  • davidmurdoch 15 hours ago
    Its be neat to incorporate this into a AR headset. They could potentially map non-visual wavelengths to new colors (or is just the one possible?). Probably never going to be practical due to the precision it requires, but imagine seeing actual colors with IR/XRAY/UV overlayed on to in a new color!

    Reminds me of the Cylon in Battlestar Galactica who hated his creators for giving him senses limited to human limits when machines could do so much more.

    Someone should at the least make a Sci Fi movie with this idea as a plot device.

  • layer8 16 hours ago
    This is a bit like fuzzing the visual system with invalid input. ;)
  • patrickmay 17 hours ago
    Octarine?
  • Kaibeezy 17 hours ago
  • karaterobot 17 hours ago
    My knowledge of color vision is hand-wavey. This isn't artificially simulated (or stimulated) tetrachromacy, right?
    • perihelions 16 hours ago
      No, it's still within the span of the ordinary three color receptor types. It's just the ratios within those three are outside of the usual, possible ratios.

      There's a Wikipedia article about the topic,

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impossible_color

      • jerf 16 hours ago
        The Wikipedia article also includes instructions on how to see these colors, so "never seen before" is a bit strong.

        Technically, the technique they are using may give you a slightly different color than the Wikipedia pictures would lead you to. Depleting one color and then looking at the other color would still technically have the original rod firing at some fraction of its recharge rate rather than zero. But that would be the difference between RGB(252, 0, 0) and RGB(254, 0, 0) and not something like those versus RGB(10, 0, 0). It produces nearly the same color.

        I'm actually surprised the article doesn't mention it. That the journalist doesn't know about this is not a huge surprise but I'd kind of expect the researchers to know that there is in fact a way to see at least flashes of these out-of-gamut colors for normal people with no special equipment. It's just a static picture that would easily fit into the article.

  • zug_zug 16 hours ago
    Cool, but I wish it said how the participants subjectively would have described the experience.
  • bitwize 16 hours ago
    They saw a hooloovoo -- a super-intelligent shade of blue!
  • Distilitron 16 hours ago
    [flagged]
  • coolThingsFirst 16 hours ago
    This is always weird. Like the environment is basically that which can be interpreted by sense. So then what is base reality and does it even exist?