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colour blindness
(redirected from color vision deficiency)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Legal, Financial, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.09 sec.

colour blindness

Hereditary defect of vision that reduces the ability to discriminate certain colours, usually red and green. The condition is sex-linked, affecting men more than women.

In the most common types of colour blindness there is confusion among the red–yellow–green range of colours; for example, many colour-blind observers are unable to distinguish red from yellow or yellow from green. Most cases of the condition are congenital and caused by a recessive gene variant located on the X chromosome. This implies that most women with the gene will only be carriers, while all men who inherit the variant will be affected by colour blindness. The gene defect disables one of the three colour receptors in the retina.

Lead poisoning and toxic conditions caused by excessive smoking can also lead to colour blindness. Between 2% and 6% of men and less than 1% of women are colour-blind.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
Essentially any spectral response can be designed using ColorCorrect and it can be used to improve color vision deficiency.
The swab goes to a laboratory where the color genes, which are expressed in the eye but are present in all cells, are specifically analyzed to give both a precise identification and an accurate classification of any color vision deficiency.
5 percent of females in Australia and New Zealand are colorblind or have a color vision deficiency.
 
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