Posted in Color Deficiency • Tags: anomalous trichromacy, Color Blindness, Color Deficiency, dichromacy, Monochromacy
A color deficiency is what most people mistakenly refer to as color blindness. Labeling an individual as color blind is inaccurate because overall a person’s eyes function properly. The individual is able to detect, focus on and process images. Except for the condition called monochromacy, an affected person is not blind to color.
An individual with a color defect has difficulty distinguishing hues. Such a problem stems from the specialized cell receptors in the eyes called cones. Three different cones contain pigments that absorb various amounts of light. Wavelengths determine the amount of pigmentation the cones absorb and the absorption determines how the eye detects and blends the primary colors of red, green, blue and yellow. More →
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Posted on February 18, 2008 by HART (1-800-HART) • There are no comments, hop to it!
Posted in Color Blindness • Tags: Color Blindness, disease, Eye Care, eye problem, vision
What is Color Blindness?
Color blindness is a condition in which a person cannot distinguish color properly. There are several variations of color blindness and each one relates back to a problem with the functionality of the cells inside the retina that deal with processing light sensitivity. The rod cells are activated by low light while the cone cells are activated by daylight.
The pigments inside each of the 3 cone cells react and respond differently as each absorbs light. Each pigment processes a different wavelength: short, medium and long. In a normal eye, this interaction and overlap between the cones, pigments and the amount of light each absorbs as the eye processes various images is what makes it possible to create the wide spectrum of color that most individuals are able to view.
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Posted on December 7, 2007 by HART (1-800-HART) • There are no comments, hop to it!