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Photo Evaluation
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Color Blind
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<blockquote data-quote="Felisek" data-source="post: 433213" data-attributes="member: 23887"><p>I did this test (thought from a different website) a while ago and got a score of about 40. Then, I changed my screen colour profile from calibrated with Spyder device, which I use for photography, to one of the default profiles. This gave more saturated screen colours. This time, my score was 20.</p><p></p><p>I know that my eyes are not so great in recognising subtle colours. Some colleagues at work got a score of 0. But keep in mind that a test like this very strongly depends on your screen calibration and saturation. To get an objective score you'd need either a screen calibrated specifically for the test, or to have the test tiles printed using a calibrated printer.</p><p></p><p>PS: I think colour resolution changes with age. From a very small sample of my colleagues who took this test I noticed that older people generally had worse results.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Felisek, post: 433213, member: 23887"] I did this test (thought from a different website) a while ago and got a score of about 40. Then, I changed my screen colour profile from calibrated with Spyder device, which I use for photography, to one of the default profiles. This gave more saturated screen colours. This time, my score was 20. I know that my eyes are not so great in recognising subtle colours. Some colleagues at work got a score of 0. But keep in mind that a test like this very strongly depends on your screen calibration and saturation. To get an objective score you'd need either a screen calibrated specifically for the test, or to have the test tiles printed using a calibrated printer. PS: I think colour resolution changes with age. From a very small sample of my colleagues who took this test I noticed that older people generally had worse results. [/QUOTE]
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