Both my eyes may from time to time perceive colors in a different way. When they do, one would see everything in more greenish-blue hues, the other in more red-yellowish hues. It’s often the case when I closed one eye for a moment, or when that eye was on the pillow side after resting. So I assume it’s either temperature-related, or simply that one of my eyes’ cone cells were too exposed to, say, red, because of red light filtering through my closed eyelid, and therefore were less sensitive to it afterwards.
I have observed different color temperatures in my left or right eyes some times and observed that these can be changed after wearing red/blue glasses; by swapping which lens covered which eye, I could correct them both back to a more balanced condition.
Both my eyes may from time to time perceive colors in a different way. When they do, one would see everything in more greenish-blue hues, the other in more red-yellowish hues. It’s often the case when I closed one eye for a moment, or when that eye was on the pillow side after resting. So I assume it’s either temperature-related, or simply that one of my eyes’ cone cells were too exposed to, say, red, because of red light filtering through my closed eyelid, and therefore were less sensitive to it afterwards.
(I scored 3 on http://www.apartmenttherapy.com/how-well-do-you-see-color-173018)
I have observed different color temperatures in my left or right eyes some times and observed that these can be changed after wearing red/blue glasses; by swapping which lens covered which eye, I could correct them both back to a more balanced condition.
I have this too. Also occasionally when I am reading a dead-tree book in the sunlight, in one eye the text will appear red or green instead of black.
I have this too.