princealbertofb Wrote:It's probably something to do with how your eye receives the waves of colour and the way your brain processes them.
anything affecting just one eye is not something the brain processing contributes to. it's wholly in the eye.
i'm gonna explain this.
our eyes have a different neural wiring than the rest of the body. while in motor control the right side of the brain controls the left side of the body and vice versa, this isn't the case with eyes. the right side of the brain does not control the left eye, and the left side of the brain does not control the right eye.
it is this way: your field of vision in each eye is split into the left side and the right side (left hemifield of the retina and the right hemifield of the retina).
--left hemiretina in the LEFT eye (temporal) is sent to the LEFT side of the brain.
--right hemiretina in the LEFT eye (nasal) is sent to toe RIGHT side of the brain.
--left hemiretina in the RIGHT eye (nasal) is sent to the LEFT side of the brain.
--right hemiretina in the RIGHT eye (temporal) is sent to the RIGHT side of the brain.
this adds up to:
--LEFT field of vision in both eyes is sent to the RIGHT cerebral hemisphere.
--RIGHT field of vision in both eyes is sent to the LEFT cerebral hemisphere.
(NB. the image is also inverted in the vertical plane).
here's a simplified diagram i drew:
both eyes send projections to both sides of the brain. it is easy to see from this that if there is a problem in the brain or the neural pathways along the way after the optic chiasm, it would affect both eyes in the same way. not just one eye. if it was in the brain processing [MENTION=20947]MikeW[/MENTION] would have altered color vision in both eyes.