vc10um
Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Aug 22, 2009
- Messages
- 6,006
hatsumomo|1300966137|2878774 said:Wow, I thought I was more color sensitive than that. I got a 30 and I'm in my 20s, but then again, I did take the test in the dark before dawn in a dimly lit room so I will try again when the sun is out! Hopefully I'll score better than a 30!
kenny|1300983992|2879002 said:hatsumomo|1300966137|2878774 said:Wow, I thought I was more color sensitive than that. I got a 30 and I'm in my 20s, but then again, I did take the test in the dark before dawn in a dimly lit room so I will try again when the sun is out! Hopefully I'll score better than a 30!
I would guess a dimly-lit room would result in a better score.
A bright room would cause the pupils to constrict more, blocking out some of the light of the color chips that your retina needs to discriminate the hues.
You want your pupils fully open to let in more light of those color chips.
Light is the data and more data is good.
Along the same lines, I'd also guess turning up the brightness of of your monitor helps.
Just a theory.
kenny|1300989203|2879125 said:But this is a test of the ability to see slight differences in hues, not the absolute accuracy of those any of those hues to a reference standard.
Also whey you take the test the source of light is your monitor itself not the room light.
Plus the room light affects all of the colored boxes equally.
Even a cheap uncalibrated monitor does whatever it does to ALL of the color chips so it's a wash because the test is about slight side by side hue differences.
I'm just speculating and reasoning.
I could certainly be wrong.
If calibrating a monitor includes changing the difference in how hues are displayed then I'm certainly wrong.
If a calibrated monitor improves scores then they should shut the website down (or post a huge disclaimer) since I'll bet over 99% of people use an uncalibrated monitor.
kenny|1300989203|2879125 said:But this is a test of the ability to see slight differences in hues, not the absolute accuracy of those any of those hues to a reference standard.
Also whey you take the test the source of light is your monitor itself not the room light.
Plus the room light affects all of the colored boxes equally.
Even a cheap uncalibrated monitor does whatever it does to ALL of the color chips so it's a wash because the test is about slight side by side hue differences.
I'm just speculating and reasoning.
I could certainly be wrong.
If calibrating a monitor includes changing the difference in how hues are displayed then I'm certainly wrong.
If a calibrated monitor improves scores then they should shut the website down (or post a huge disclaimer) since I'll bet over 99% of people use an uncalibrated monitor.
Lady_Disdain|1300932918|2878630 said:8 is a great score!
My problem area seems to be the transition from green to blue. The problem is that when I see the "correct" graduation, it seems wrong to me, like some bars should be moved to the right or left.