Thursday, 12 February 2026

Colour Blindness

 


This week my eye post is about colour blindness, my maternal grandfather was colour blind. This is a condition that affects around 8% of men and only 0.5% of women. It is estimated that 300 million people are colour blind.

The huge gender difference exists because the most common type is linked to the X chromosome.

Colour blindness is a colour vision deficiency, not a total inability to see colour. In fact, 99% of people with “colour blindness” still see colours, just with reduced discrimination between certain hues.

There are different types of colour blindness with most cases fall into three major categories:

Protan defects – reduced sensitivity to red light

Deutan defects – reduced sensitivity to green light

Tritan defects – reduced sensitivity to blue light
These correspond to the three cone types in the eye.

Red–green colour blindness is by far the most common, affecting 95–98% of people with colour vision deficiency. This is sex linked and recessive, passed through the mother. A father cannot pass red–green colour blindness to his sons. If a woman is red–green colour blind, all her sons will inherit it.

Colour blindness ranges from mild to absolute although it is rare for someone to have absolute which means they see everything in greyscale

People with strong colour blindness may distinguish only 20 hues, compared to over 100 for those with typical colour vision.



This condition may cause some to feel overlooked or misunderstood, as others often don’t realise how much it affects daily tasks.

Being asked “What colour is this?” is widely considered the most annoying question to colour‑blind people.

Colour blindness is detected through colour vision tests that check how well someone can distinguish between different colours. These tests are simple, non‑invasive, and usually take only a few minutes.

The most common test is the Ishihara Colour Plates

The test shows a series of circles filled with coloured dots. Inside each circle is a number or pattern made of dots in a different colour. People with red–green colour blindness often cannot see the number, or they see a different number.

There are other tests such as the Farnsworth D-15 test, Anomaloscope, HRR (Hardy–Rand–Rittler) Test. Online screening tests, however, these can give an indication but are not fully reliable because screen brightness and colour calibration vary.

Babies are born colour blind; full colour vision develops by about 6 months.

It’s possible—though rare—to be colour blind in one eye only (unilateral dichromacy).

The first scientific paper on colour blindness was written by John Dalton in 1794.

                                              

10 comments:

  1. Most interesting Jo-Anne, I've never thought a great deal about colourblindness.

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  2. One thing that annoys me 100% is being forced to go thru the color blind tests when they already have on record that I am not color blind. How many tests does it take? You either have it at birth or you don't. Just a petty annoyance and a waste of my time when in for an eye exam. Since nothing can be done about it...why test for it (a million times).

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  3. I had no idea that babies are born color blind, Jo-Anne. So interesting!

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  4. This is something you rarely hear about nowadays.

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  5. That is interesting. I know they now have special lens for certain types of color blindness. Hopefully in the future it won't be as prevalent as it is or was in years past and the lens will be able to help all types.

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The Post with Links to Other Posts

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