Mystery of dress that split internet solved
BY Agencies20 May 2015 3:42 AM IST
Agencies20 May 2015 3:42 AM IST
MIT scientists have cracked the science behind the dress that went viral on the internet after some saw it as black and blue while others perceived it to be gold and white.
In a survey of 1,400 individuals, with over 300 who had never seen “The Dress” before, researchers found that people who perceive it as white and gold may have just been exposed to natural daylight, while those who saw a black and blue garment may spend most of their time surrounded by artificial light sources.
Neuroscientist Bevil Conway believes “The Dress” phenomenon marked the greatest extent of individual differences in colour perception ever documented.
In February, 21-year-old singer named Caitlin McNeill had posted a picture on her blog of a dress that was blue and black but was being seen as white and gold by some people.
The dress went viral on the internet, with celebrities such as Taylor Swift jumping in to debate the colour.
Conway, who teaches at Wellesley College and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and his team designed an experiment in which they asked people to identify the colours they saw on “The Dress” from a full palette.
They found impressive individual differences in colour perception; they also found that people fall into one of <g data-gr-id="21">three</g> camps corresponding to the main groups identified by social media: a blue/black camp, a white/gold camp, and a smaller blue/brown contingent.
“It could have been the case that you had a continuum of perceived colours, but if you plot the colours people picked, you see two main clumps falling into the two categories for what words people used to describe the colours of ‘The Dress,’” said Conway.
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