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Scientists discover naturally impossible color by hacking a human eye

Researchers have hacked the human eye and discovered a previously unseen color called 'olo,' which only five people on Earth have ever seen.

Scientists discover naturally impossible color by hacking a human eye
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Tech and Science Editor
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TL;DR: Researchers have discovered a color called "olo," unseen by humans before, by stimulating specific M cones in the retina. This breakthrough bypasses natural RGB limitations, revealing a unique color experience that cannot be replicated on screens or described accurately, expanding understanding of human color perception.

A team of researchers discovered an unseen color that they claim hasn't been seen by any human that has ever existed before.

Scientists discover naturally impossible color by hacking a human eye 1165
Vision scientist Austin Roorda

A new study published in the journal Science Advances details research conducted by scientists in California who explained how they stimulated specific cells within the retinas of study participants to produce a color that is impossible to see naturally. The new color has been deemed "olo," and the above image is what the researchers say is the closest to what olo looks like, but apparently, the image pales in comparison to the actual color. Moreover, study coauthor Austin Roodrda said, "There is no way to convey that color in an article or on a monitor."

Adding, "The whole point is that this is not the color we see, it's just not. The color we see is a version of it, but it absolutely pales by comparison with the experience of olo."

Vision scientist Austin Roorda

The way humans perceive light is through RGB photoreceptors, Red, Green, and Blue photoreceptors. Here's how our wetware works. Photoreceptor cells within the retina are called cones, and there are three types: L cones for long wavelengths of light, which pick up red light, M cones for green light, and S cones for blue light. Colors naturally blend between these spectrums, causing a variation of color to be displayed in our vision. However, while L cones and S cones are able to be stimulated on their own, M cones can't be activated on their own, as the light also activates L or S cones as well as the M cones.

This is where the hacking comes. Researchers found a way to bypass this limitation by mapping the study participants' retinas to identify the location of the M cones. Then, in a dark room, the study participants' M cones were shot with a light beam. Each M cone was hit individually, and as the light was hitting the M cones, the color olo appeared in the participants' field of view.

Despite the achievement, not every scientist is convinced that the study provides any value.

"It is not a new color. It's a more saturated green that can only be produced in a subject with normal red-green chromatic mechanism when the only input comes from M cones." Barbur said that the work had "limited value," said John Barbur, a professor of optics and visual science at City St George's, University of London, to The Guardian

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Jak joined TweakTown in 2017 and has since reviewed 100s of new tech products and kept us informed daily on the latest science, space, and artificial intelligence news. Jak's love for science, space, and technology, and, more specifically, PC gaming, began at 10 years old. It was the day his dad showed him how to play Age of Empires on an old Compaq PC. Ever since that day, Jak fell in love with games and the progression of the technology industry in all its forms.

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