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This is a question Unusual talents

B3tans! Can you hum with your tongue? (Your Ginger Fuhrer can and he once demonstrated this to a producer on Blockbusters on the hope of getting on TV) Maybe you can bend your thumb in a really horrid way that makes it look broken. (Your Ginger Fuhrer's other special talent) What can you do? Extra points if you fancy demonstrating this with the odd pic or youtube vid.

Suggested by Dazbrilliantwhites

(, Thu 18 Nov 2010, 14:28)
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I hope someone can tell me this is normal
If i close my left eye and look around, everything has a red tint.
If I close my right, everything has a blue tint
I did mention this to a friend a while back and they said they didnt have that
I'm hoping their eyes are weird and not mine
(, Sun 21 Nov 2010, 1:54, 11 replies)

I think you need to take the 3d glasses off.
(, Sun 21 Nov 2010, 2:37, closed)
That.
You don't need them in this "reality" 3D.
(, Sun 21 Nov 2010, 11:37, closed)

"Why does one have a red tint and the other slightly green?
Your retinas have two types of cells for seeing: rods and cones. The cones detect colors and, as it turns out, there are three types of cones. Each type is more sensitive to either red, green, or blue. Since nature rarely really does things identically, your eyes probably have slightly different numbers of the red, green, and blue cones (with blue being fewest in both eyes). Your eye that sees green better simply has more green-sensitive cones and your eye that sees red better has more red-sensitive cones.

Each of us has minor variations in the number of each type of cell, and the differences are strong enough for us to have noticed and wondered about it.


As to why both eyes look fine, that's a function of the brain. Some animal brains are more tuned to process movement than shape (For example, frogs really can only see something that's moving), others are more attuned to shape than movement. Human brains readily process both, and have not only pattern recognition but multiple pattern recognition (that's why we see the Peter/Paul picture as alternately faces and a vase).
When a person has crossed eyes (strabismus) their brain basically ignores one of the eyes (the weaker one) and they'll see only one image. If a person one eye that's simply a little weaker (my left one tends to be a little near-sighted), the brain will combine the 'agreeing' portions of the images and ignore the portions that aren't as well-defined. The same thing is true for the color viewing: your brain is able to sort of combine the good and cancel out the bad so that you see the best you can in each situation.

That's why you see a greenish tint with one eye, a reddish tint with the other, and fine with both."
(, Sun 21 Nov 2010, 13:16, closed)
Or he's just sitting with a bright light to one side.
Low sun at 90 degrees to the direction I'm facing does the same thing to me.
(, Sun 21 Nov 2010, 15:28, closed)
ah thanks
not just me then :)
(, Sun 21 Nov 2010, 15:50, closed)
Very good answer
I suspect that the eye with the red tint is less sensitive to red light hence he's seeing the brain's correction for it when he closes the other.

Fascinating stuff.
(, Tue 23 Nov 2010, 9:02, closed)
Could be the Doppler effect...
Does your right eye move backwards very fast, and your left eye towards things very fast?
(, Sun 21 Nov 2010, 18:54, closed)
If he happens to be
spinning around at about 11 million RPM, that would be the answer. Red shift and blueshift, delending which way he's facing.
(, Mon 22 Nov 2010, 9:43, closed)
I get something like that sometimes if I'm tired.
Can't remember what colours it is though. I've not played with it for a while.
I also get some cool wibbly blind spots an hour or so before a migraine, which I do play with, and I swear I can see the flicker of a soon-to-be dead flourescent light hours before anyone else can.
(, Sun 21 Nov 2010, 19:07, closed)
No..
..that's not normal. Go have an eye-test.
(, Mon 22 Nov 2010, 17:46, closed)
Had an eye test recently
Got glasses for reading, that is all
(, Tue 23 Nov 2010, 23:42, closed)

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