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Title: Brains See Red the Same Way, Study Suggests

by Dr. Michael Lee – Health Editor
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It’s a late-night debate in college ⁢dorms across the world: Is my red the ⁣same as your ​red? two neuroscientists weigh in on this classic “Intro⁣ to Beliefs” puzzler in research published September 8 in the Journal of Neuroscience. Thier answer ‍is a resounding maybe.

There were two​ possibilities when it comes to how brains ‌perceive color,⁤ says Andreas​ Bartels of the University of⁣ Tübingen and the Max ⁤Planck Institute for‍ Biological Cybernetics in Germany. Perhaps everyone’s brain is unique, with ‍bespoke snowflake patterns of nerve cells ⁢responding when a⁤ person sees red. Or it could be that‌ seeing‌ red kicks ⁤off‍ a⁤ standard, predictable pattern of brain activity that⁣ doesn’t vary much from person to person.

The answer is overwhelmingly ‌the second option, ⁤the new study ⁢suggests. “there are commonalities across brains,” Bartels⁤ says. Along with colleague Michael Bannert, Bartels frist monitored the activity ⁣of nerve cells spread across visual brain areas⁣ as 15 people saw​ shades of reds, greens and yellows. The team ‍then used‍ those benchmarks to predict what color a​ person ‌was looking at, based solely on the individual’s pattern of brain activity.

The results show that neural reactions ⁢to colors⁤ are somewhat standard and don’t‌ seem ‌to vary much from ‍person to person.‌ But these neuroanatomical findings ⁣can’t answer the question of how it‌ feels to‍ see red, Bartels says. How brain⁣ activity creates subjective inner experiences is a much bigger and thornier question about consciousness, one that will​ no⁢ doubt continue to​ be debated for a long ‍time.

Laura Sanders is the neuroscience​ writer. She holds a Ph.D.⁣ in molecular biology from the University of Southern⁣ California.

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