...one technique that I've seen on Youtube is to use some yellow pigment before checking for high spots. The yellow is to add more contrast. For example, Keith Rucker shows this around the 5:00 mark in this video:... Somewhere earlier in the series, I think he said specifically what he was using both for bluing and contrast.
Being part of the Richard King scraping tradition, Keith is almost certainly using Canode blue and yellow die spotting ink, or possibly Charbonnel Aqua Wash Prussian Blue etching ink with yellow Canode. Canode washes up much more easily than Dykem. (Artco tools, which is frequently the only google hit for Canode in non-bulk quantities, looks like a fly-by-night operation, but I've bought from them several times over the past 10 years and never had a problem. I like the better contrast that the Aqua Wash has over Canode, but in my only mildly-experienced hands, I've had a hard time keeping it consistent on the surface plate over time compared to Canode).
And Hopper up there has it exactly right. There are a lot of differences in how bluing will read, depending on how thick it's put on the surface plate and how the workpiece being tested is treated, but it is absolutely true that a sufficiently low spot will get no blue, because the blue simply can't reach it, and a sufficiently high spot will get the bluing rubbed/squeezed off by contact with the surface plate. The result is that the actual low-to-high scale runs from "no blue" to "blue" and then back to "no blue".
Depending on the bluing used, how "wet" it is on the surface plate, how much the workpiece is rubbed, the phase of the moon, and probably a dozen other factors, you'll get a variety of additional visual indicators of where you are on that scale. In my hands, using Canode blues (and I'm far from an expert!) my scale (low to high) looks something like "no blue" < "thin blue that's 'sticky' looking" < "thin blue that's smooth" < (a typically thin/sharp ring of) "thick/dark/black blue" < "thin silvery-polished blue" < "bare metal".
Anyone who is arguing "the low spots are blue", or "the high spots are blue", is arguing about only part of the whole picture.