Is this what color blind people see? Can someone confirm?
I have an app on my phone (called “CVSimulator”) that represents types of colorblindness. I’ve shown it to people who are actually red/green colorblind and got confirmation from them that it’s pretty accurate.
Red/green colorblindness in humans can be either protanope or deuteranope. I’m not sure which one dogs would have (if someone is more knowledgeable on this, please chime in!) However, this is how my app interprets this image. The top is protanope, the bottom is deuteranope:

So it’s a little off, but some of the colors are correct.
Well Seymour, you are an
oddqueer fellow, but I must say, you steam agoodgay ham.Gay ham, my favorite!
Seymour on the Atari 2600
@PugJesus ❤️ 💙 :bd243:
I thought dogs, like most land predators, evolved green receptors first to detect movement in foliage, so shouldn’t they see green better than this?
Their 2 sets of cones are apparently most sensitive to blue and yellow wavelengths vs our RGB.
https://www.britannica.com/story/are-dogs-really-color-blind
This is why they can lose sight of tennis balls on a lawn. Green and yellow look very similar to them. Give your dogs blue balls!






