Friday, April 14, 2017

Color Blindness - Kit Brown

What is Color Blindness? 
Color vision deficiency or 'color blindness' is a hereditary condition usually passed down from the X chromosome. (This is why it is more common to hear about males being color blind more than females.) It causes those affected to not process color properly. There are red/green deficiencies and blue/yellow deficiencies, but then also types of deficiencies within those, etc. 

What Types of Color Blindness Are There? 
Anomalous Trichomancy - Meaning all three types of cone cells are slightly skewed, affecting vision. Within that there is protanomaly (reduced sensitivity to red light), deuteranomaly (reduced sensitivity to green light-- and the most common), and tritanomaly (reduced sensitivity to blue light, which is very rare). 
According to Colorblindawareness.org: 

"People with deuteranomaly and protanomaly are collectively known as red-green colour blind and they generally have difficulty distinguishing between reds, greens, browns and oranges. They also commonly confuse different types of blue and purple hues.
People with reduced blue sensitivity have difficulty identifying differences between blue and yellow, violet and red and blue and green. To these people the world appears as generally red, pink, black, white, grey and turquoise."

Dichromancy - People with this type of deficiency only have two types of cone cells in their retina, meaning they simply cannot perceive a certain section of color in the light section. Colorblindawareness.org says: 

People with both red and green deficiencies live in a world of murky greens where blues and yellows stand out. Browns, oranges, shades of red and green are easily confused. Both types will confuse some blues with some purples and both types will struggle to identify pale shades of most colours.
However, there are some specific differences between the 2 red/green deficiencies.
Protanopia
Protanopes are more likely to confuse:-
1. Black with many shades of red
2. Dark brown with dark green, dark orange and dark red
2. Some blues with some reds, purples and dark pinks
3. Mid-greens with some oranges
Deuteranopes
Deuteranopes are more likely to confuse:-
1. Mid-reds with mid-greens
2. Blue-greens with grey and mid-pinks
3. Bright greens with yellows
4. Pale pinks with light grey
5. Mid-reds with mid-brown
6. Light blues with lilac

How is it Caused? 
The reason for color vision deficiency is still being researched, but it is believed it can be caused by faulty cones, or a malfunctioning pathway from cone cells to the brain. 

How Does it Work? 
Color vision deficiency effects the cones in the retina which process light into color. There are three types of cone cells that interpret red, green, and blue respectively. When prompted, the brain can interpret the signals prompted from these cells to make your perceive color. For example, if you see something purple, your retina will stimulate the red and blue cone cells. 
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Who Does it Effect? 
1 in 12 males have color vision deficiency, whereas only about 1 in 200 females do. 

PERSONAL REFLECTION
I definitely found reading this as a bit of enlightening experience. Not only is my dad colorblind, but it's also kind of hard to find information on what it exactly is and how it works. I found it super interesting to be able to read this much about something so common. 

7 comments:

  1. My boyfriend is colorblind and I thought that it was interesting to learn about to get more info about it.

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  2. Why does it usually only effect males?

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  3. This was presented really well and gives a lot of information on color blindness through vivid description. How does color blindness affect someones daily life routines?

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    1. I can't speak from experience for obvious reasons, but as far as I know from what my dad's told me, it doesn't effect him much at all. I think he's red/green colorblind which is the most common, and he can still differentiate from what warped colors are red and what's green. He can still drive normally and all that stuff. Plus, people who are colorblind have it their whole lives-- by the time they're functioning adults, they're adjusted to living with it.

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  4. If you were a person living with color blindness how would you be tested to find if you have it or not?

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    1. There's not a test as far as I know, but someone who is colorblind could kind of realize that they don't see colors the way that everyone else does. One of my friends' dad is colorblind, and he didn't know until he was an adult-- they had some kind of argument over a rosebush because he thought it wasn't red. On top of that, though, the eye is super complicated, so seeing the cells within the eye itself would be a pain to take as a procedure, since color blindness has to do with cone cells in the eye.

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  5. Why dose it effect the men the most?

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