by MarkBour » Mon Dec 26, 2022 1:54 am
johnnydeep wrote: ↑Sat Dec 24, 2022 3:51 pm
Bird_Man wrote: ↑Fri Dec 23, 2022 5:27 pm
Thank you Johnnydeep. When I came to this discussion thread I said "I know someone smart will show me the moons. And you did. I tried the same inverting the image colors as you did and now I can find the moons. Great tip, thanks.
Just one more comment: this makes me wonder why humans seem to be so much better at discerning small dark things against a light background than they are at discerning small light things against a dark background (which is the "natural" way that a typical photo of space appears). Why is this true?
Me too, I came to the discussion, hoping someone would help. Bingo! Thanks johnny.
As to the question you've now put, I think it may have something to do with context. I'd like to find some experiment that carefully tried to answer your question -- "Are humans better at seeing a small speck of light in the dark, or a small speck of dark in the light?" But the situation we're discussing here, when I look at my computer monitor is:
Code: Select all
---------------------------------------------------------
| Lots of light |
| |
| --------------------------------- |
| | a region of dark, with two | |
| | very small specks of | |
| | light, and then nearby, | |
| | brighter regions of light | |
| --------------------------------- |
---------------------------------------------------------
I'm just saying, this image may be complicated. Usually, when I'm on a computer, I'm in a lighted room. And sure enough, a light speck on a dark background is hard to see. What about if I've been sitting in a totally darkened room for a while and a tiny speck of light is turned on? Anyway, it still may be quite true, what you said, "better at discerning small dark things against a light background than they are at discerning small light things against a dark background", but it might depend on context.
Here's an article that doesn't really settle it scientifically, but it and the comments give lots of perspectives:
https://tidbits.com/2019/05/31/the-dark ... dark-mode/
I could not find any scholarly reference that dealt with this issue. Admittedly, I did not spend much time at it.
[quote=johnnydeep post_id=328036 time=1671897076 user_id=132061]
[quote=Bird_Man post_id=328025 time=1671816476 user_id=141078]
Thank you Johnnydeep. When I came to this discussion thread I said "I know someone smart will show me the moons. And you did. I tried the same inverting the image colors as you did and now I can find the moons. Great tip, thanks.
[/quote]
Just one more comment: this makes me wonder why humans seem to be so much better at discerning small dark things against a light background than they are at discerning small light things against a dark background (which is the "natural" way that a typical photo of space appears). Why is this true?
[/quote]
Me too, I came to the discussion, hoping someone would help. Bingo! Thanks johnny.
As to the question you've now put, I think it may have something to do with context. I'd like to find some experiment that carefully tried to answer your question -- "Are humans better at seeing a small speck of light in the dark, or a small speck of dark in the light?" But the situation we're discussing here, when I look at my computer monitor is:
[code]
---------------------------------------------------------
| Lots of light |
| |
| --------------------------------- |
| | a region of dark, with two | |
| | very small specks of | |
| | light, and then nearby, | |
| | brighter regions of light | |
| --------------------------------- |
---------------------------------------------------------
[/code]
I'm just saying, this image may be complicated. Usually, when I'm on a computer, I'm in a lighted room. And sure enough, a light speck on a dark background is hard to see. What about if I've been sitting in a totally darkened room for a while and a tiny speck of light is turned on? Anyway, it still may be quite true, what you said, "better at discerning small dark things against a light background than they are at discerning small light things against a dark background", but it might depend on context.
Here's an article that doesn't really settle it scientifically, but it and the comments give lots of perspectives:
[url]https://tidbits.com/2019/05/31/the-dark-side-of-dark-mode/[/url]
I could not find any scholarly reference that dealt with this issue. Admittedly, I did not spend much time at it.