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Showing posts with the label retinal mechanism

COLOR BLINDNESS AND RETINAL MECHANISMS

 Color Blindness The most common test for color blindness uses the Ishihara charts, which are plates containing figures made up of colored spots on a background of similarly shaped colored spots. The figures are intentionally made up of colors that are liable to look the same as the background to an individual who is color blind. Some color-blind individuals are unable to distinguish certain colors, whereas others have only a color weakness. The prefixes “prot-,” “deuter-,” and “trit-” refer to defects of the red, green, and blue cone systems, respectively. Individuals with normal color vision are called trichromats. Dichromats are individuals with only two cone systems; they may have protanopia, deuteranopia, or tritanopia. Monochromats have only one cone system. Dichromats can match their color spectrum by mixing only two primary colors, and monochromats match theirs by varying the intensity of only one. Abnormal color vision is present as an inherited abnormality in white popula...