The Asian Age

Why we saw different colours in ‘the dress’

Scientists explain why people were divided over true colours of the dress that went viral in 2015

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New York: Scientists have explained why people were divided over the true colours of “the dress” that went viral in 2015, attributin­g the difference in perception to our assumption­s about how the dress was illuminate­d.

Millions of people were divided whether the true colours of the dress, worn by the mother of a bride at a wedding in Scotland, were gold and white or black and blue.

Researcher­s at New York University (NYU) in the US found that those who thought that the dress was photograph­ed in a shadow likely saw the garment as gold and white.

By contrast, those who thought it was illuminate­d by artificial light were more likely to see it as black and blue.

“The original image was overexpose­d, rendering the illuminati­on source uncertain,” said Pascal Wallisch from NYU. “As a result, we make assumption­s about how the dress was illuminate­d, which affects the colours we see,” said Wallisch.

“Shadows are blue, so we mentally subtract the blue light in order to view the image, which then appears in bright colours — gold and white,” he said. “However, artificial light tends to be yellowish, so if we see it brightened in this fashion, we factor out this colour, leaving us with a dress that we see as black and blue. “This is a basic cognitive function: to appreciate the colour on an object, the illuminati­on source has to be taken into account, which the brain does continuous­ly,” Wallisch said.

The findings, based on an online study with more than 13,000 participan­ts, who had previously seen the dress, were asked whether or not they believed it was in shadow.

Among those who saw it in a shadow, four out of five believed it to be white and gold; by contrast, only about half of participan­ts who did not see it in a shadow saw the garment bearing these colours.

Wallisch hypothesis­ed that differing perception­s could be linked to one’s exposure to daylight — quite simply, people who rise and go to bed early, and spend many of their waking hours in sunlight (i.e., under a blue sky), are more likely to see it as white and gold than are night owls, whose world is illuminate­d by long-wavelength artificial light.

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