this post was submitted on 09 Sep 2025
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Is the colour you see the same as what I see? It’s a question that has puzzled both philosophers and neuroscientists for decades, but has proved notoriously difficult to answer... Now, a study that recorded patterns of brain activity in 15 participants suggests that colours are represented and processed in the same way in the brains of different people.

The researchers found that in most cases they were able to predict which colour was being viewed by a participant in this second group, using the patterns of brain activity they had seen in the first group. They also found that different colours were processed by subtly different areas within the same region of the visual cortex, and that different brain cells responded more strongly to particular colours. These differences were consistent across participants.

The paper on Journal of Neuroscience (sadly not open access): https://www.jneurosci.org/content/early/2025/08/29/JNEUROSCI.2717-20.2025


My critique is... the researchers are based in Tubingen, Germany, and I assume most of their 15 participants are of European cultural heritage (cannot verify... no open access). I would love to see if they can replicate this in a more multi-cultured setting. Some Asian cultures have rather different verbiage for different colors, and I wonder whether that would bias ppl's perception.

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[–] shalafi@lemmy.world -4 points 1 day ago

I always thought his was common sense and discussions to the contrary strike me a useless navel gazing.

[–] eestileib@lemmy.blahaj.zone -3 points 1 day ago (7 children)

I have extensive personal experience indicating that I do not align with this claim.

"Pink"/"purple" and "blue"/"green" just do not work for me the way they do for anybody else it seems, it's been nearly five decades and, despite effort, I am barely better than chance when one of my kids something up and says "what color?"

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