Dictionary Definition
tritanopia n : rare form of dichromacy
characterized by a lowered sensitivity to blue light resulting in
an inability to distinguish blue and yellow [syn: blue-blindness]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- A form of color blindness. The person's retina does not respond to the blue color, due to lack of "blue" cone opsins.
See also
Extensive Definition
Color blindness, a color vision
deficiency in humans, is
the inability to perceive differences between some of the colors that other people can
distinguish. It is most often of genetic nature, but may also occur
because of eye, nerve, or brain damage, or due to exposure
to certain chemicals.
The English chemist John Dalton
in 1798 published the first scientific paper on the subject,
"Extraordinary facts relating to the vision of colours", after the
realization of his own color blindness; because of Dalton's work,
the condition is sometimes called Daltonism, although this term is
now used for a type of color blindness called deuteranopia.
Color blindness is usually classed as disability; however, in
selected situations color blind people have an advantage over
people with normal color vision. There are some studies which
conclude that color blind individuals are better at penetrating
certain camouflages. Monochromats
may have a minor advantage in dark vision, but only in the first
five and a half minutes of dark adaptation.
Background
The normal human retina contains two kinds of
light cells: the rod cells
(active in low
light) and the cone cells
(active in
normal daylight). Normally, there are three kinds of cones,
each containing a different pigment. The cones are activated when
the pigments absorb light. The absorption
spectra of the cones differ; one is maximally sensitive to
short wavelengths, one to medium wavelengths, and the third to long
wavelengths (their peak sensitivities are in the blue,
yellowish-green, and yellow regions of the spectrum, respectively).
The absorption spectra of all three systems cover much of the
visible spectrum, so it is not entirely accurate to refer to them
as "blue", "green" and "red" receptors, especially because
the "red" receptor actually has its peak sensitivity in the
yellow. The sensitivity
of normal color vision actually depends on the overlap between the
absorption spectra of the three systems: different colors are
recognized when the different types of cone are stimulated to
different extents. Red light, for example, stimulates the long
wavelength cones much more than either of the others, and reducing
wavelength causes the other two cone systems to be increasingly
stimulated, causing a gradual change in hue. Many of the genes
involved in color vision are on the X chromosome, making color
blindness more common in males than in females.
Causes
Any recessive genetic characteristic that
persists at a level as high as 5% is generally regarded as possibly
having some advantage over the long term. In WWII it was discovered
that analysis of color aerial photos yielded more information if at
least one team member was color blind. Significantly, humans are
the only trichromatic primates with such a high percentage of color
blindness. As the color blind test example (next to analysis)
demonstrates, color blind people see different patterns. WWII teams
that analyzed aerial photographs were looking for unusual patterns,
so a color blind person could prove useful. From an evolutionary
perspective a hunting group will be more effective if it includes a
color blind hunter (one in twenty) who can spot prey that others
cannot.
Another possible advantage could be due to the
presence of tetrachromic female. Owing to X-chromosome
inactivation, women who are heterozygous for anomalous trichromacy
ought to have at least four types of cone in their retinae. It is
possible that this affords them an extra dimension of color vision,
by analogy to New World monkeys where heterozygous females gain
trichromacy in a basically dichromatic species.
Genetic modes of inheritance
Color blindness can be inherited genetically. Some people believe, incorrectly, that it is only ever inherited from mutations on the X chromosome. Since the mapping of the human genome there have been many causative mutations discovered. Mutations capable of causing color blindness originate from at least 19 different chromosomes and many different genes (as shown online at the Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man (OMIM) database at John Hopkins University). Cone Dystrophy, Cone-Rod Dystrophy, Achromatopsia (aka Rod Monochromatism, aka Stationery Cone Dystrophy, aka Cone Dysfunction Syndrome), Blue Cone Monochromatism, Retinitis Pigmentosa (initially affects rods but can later progress to cones and therefore color blindness), Diabetes, Age-Related Macular Degeneration, Retinoblastoma, Lebers Congenital Amorosis - These are some of the inherited diseases known to cause color blindness.Inherited color blindness can be congenital (from
birth), or it can commence in childhood or adulthood. Depending on
the mutation, it can be stationary, that is, remain the same
throughout a person's lifetime, or progressive. Because of the
nature of progressive phenotypes deteriorating the retina and other
parts of the eye, certain forms of color blindness can progress to
legal blindness, i.e., an acuity of 6/60 or worse, and often leave
a person with complete blindness.
Color blindness always pertains to the cone
photoreceptors in our retina as the cones are capable of detecting
the color frequencies of light we perceive. There are 3 types of
cones, each responsible for detecting either red, green or
blue.
About two percent of females and eight percent of
males are color blind (Sewell, 1983). The reason males are at a
greater risk of inheriting an X linked mutation is because males
only have one X chromosome (XY), and females have two (XX). In
color blindness caused by mutations on the X chromosome there is a
50% chance of male offspring being affected and a 50% chance of
female offspring being carriers. Nature usually deals with mutated
genes by expressing the healthy copy in offspring. Males only
receive one copy and are therefore more vulnerable to mutations on
the X chromosome being passed to them by their mothers. If the X
chromosome passed to a male carries a color blindness causing
mutation then the male will be color blind because there is no
chance of another X chromosome silencing the mutation. If one of
the X chromosomes of a female carries the gene for color blindness,
generally the other will not, so there is a dominant gene to take
the place of the recessive one.
Other causes
Shaken Baby Syndrome (this can cause damage to
the retina and brain damage and therefore cause color blindness);
Accidents and other trauma to the retina and brain; UV damage (not
wearing appropriate protection). Most UV damage is caused during
childhood and this form of retinal degeneration is the leading
cause of blindness in the world. Damage often presents later in
life.
Types
There are many types of color blindness. The most
common are red-green hereditary (genetic) photoreceptor disorders,
but it is also possible to acquire color blindness through damage
to the retina, optic nerve, or higher brain areas. Higher brain
areas implicated in color processing include the parvocellular
pathway of the lateral
geniculate nucleus of the thalamus, and visual area
V4 of the visual
cortex. Acquired color blindness is generally unlike the more
typical genetic disorders. For example, it is possible to acquire
color blindness only in a portion of the visual field but maintain
normal color vision elsewhere. Some forms of acquired color
blindness are reversible. Transient color blindness also occurs
(very rarely) in the aura of
some migraine
sufferers.
The different kinds of inherited color blindness
result from partial or complete loss of function of one or more of
the different cone systems. When one cone system is compromised,
dichromacy results.
The most frequent forms of human color blindness result from
problems with either the middle or long wavelength sensitive cone
systems, and involve difficulties in discriminating reds, yellows,
and greens from one another. They are collectively referred to as
"red-green color blindness", though the term is an
over-simplification and is somewhat misleading. Other forms of
color blindness are much more rare. They include problems in
discriminating blues from yellows, and the rarest forms of all,
complete color blindness or monochromacy, where one
cannot distinguish any color from grey, as in
a black-and-white
movie or photograph.
Classification of color deficiencies
By etiology
Color vision deficiencies can be classified as
acquired or inherited.
- Acquired
- Inherited: There are three types of inherited or congenital color vision deficiencies: monochromacy, dichromacy, and anomalous trichromacy. is the lack of ability to distinguish colors; caused by cone defect or absence. Monochromacy occurs when two or all three of the cone pigments are missing and color and lightness vision is reduced to one dimension. There are two major types of color blindness: those who have difficulty distinguishing between red and green, and those who have difficulty distinguishing between blue and yellow.
- Total color blindness
- Partial color blindness
-
- Red-green
-
- Dichromacy (protanopia and deuteranopia)
- Anomalous trichromacy (protanomaly and deuteranomaly)
- Blue-yellow
-
- Dichromacy (tritanopia)
- Anomalous trichromacy (tritanomaly)
Congenital color vision deficiencies
Congenital color vision deficiencies are
subdivided based on the number of primary hues needed to match a
given sample in the visible
spectrum.
Monochromacy
Monochromacy
is the condition of possessing only a single channel for conveying
information about color. Monochromats possess a complete inability
to distinguish any colors and perceive only variations in
brightness. Visual acuity usually falls to the 20/50 to 20/400
range
Dichromacy
Protanopes, deuteranopes, and tritanopes are
dichromats; that is, they can match any color they see with some
mixture of just two spectral lights (whereas normally humans are
trichromats and
require three lights). These individuals normally know they have a
color vision problem and it can affect their lives on a daily
basis. Protanopes and deuteranopes see no perceptible difference
between red, orange, yellow, and green. All these colors that seem
so different to the normal viewer appear to be the same color for
this two percent of the population.
- Protanopia (1% of males): Lacking the long-wavelength sensitive retinal cones, those with this condition are unable to distinguish between colors in the green-yellow-red section of the spectrum. They have a neutral point at a greenish wavelength around 492 nm – that is, they cannot discriminate light of this wavelength from white. For the protanope, the brightness of red, orange, and yellow is much reduced compared to normal. This dimming can be so pronounced that reds may be confused with black or dark gray, and red traffic lights may appear to be extinguished. They may learn to distinguish reds from yellows and from greens primarily on the basis of their apparent brightness or lightness, not on any perceptible hue difference. Violet, lavender, and purple are indistinguishable from various shades of blue because their reddish components are so dimmed as to be invisible. E.g. Pink flowers, reflecting both red light and blue light, may appear just blue to the protanope. Very few people have been found who have one normal eye and one protanopic eye. These unilateral dichromats report that with only their protanopic eye open, they see wavelengths below the neutral point as blue and those above it as yellow. This is a rare form of color blindness.
- Deuteranopia (1% of males): Lacking the medium-wavelength cones, those affected are again unable to distinguish between colors in the green-yellow-red section of the spectrum. Their neutral point is at a slightly longer wavelength, 498 nm. The deuteranope suffers the same hue discrimination problems as the protanope, but without the abnormal dimming. The names red, orange, yellow, and green really mean very little to him aside from being different names that every one else around him seems to be able to agree on. Similarly, violet, lavender, purple, and blue, seem to be too many names to use logically for hues that all look alike to him. This is one of the rarer forms of colorblindness making up about 1% of the male population, also known as Daltonism after John Dalton. (Dalton's diagnosis was confirmed as deuteranopia in 1995, some 150 years after his death, by DNA analysis of his preserved eyeball.) Deuteranopic unilateral dichromats report that with only their deuteranopic eye open, they see wavelengths below the neutral point as blue and those above it as yellow.
- Tritanopia (less than 1% of males and females): Lacking the short-wavelength cones, those affected are unable to distinguish between the colors in the blue-yellow section of the spectrum. This form of color blindness is not sex-linked.
Anomalous trichromacy
Those with protanomaly, deuteranomaly, or
tritanomaly are trichromats, but the color matches they make differ
from the normal. They are called anomalous trichromats. In order to
match a given spectral yellow light, protanomalous observers need
more red light in a red/green mixture than a normal observer, and
deuteranomalous observers need more green. From a practical stand
point though, many protanomalous and deuteranomalous people breeze
through life with very little difficulty doing tasks that require
normal color vision. Some may not even be aware that their color
perception is in any way different from normal. The only problem
they have is passing a color vision test.
Protanomaly and deuteranomaly can be readily
observed using an instrument called an anomaloscope, which mixes
spectral red and green lights in variable proportions, for
comparison with a fixed spectral yellow. If this is done in front
of a large audience of men, as the proportion of red is increased
from a low value, first a small proportion of people will declare a
match, while most of the audience sees the mixed light as greenish.
These are the deuteranomalous observers. Next, as more red is added
the majority will say that a match has been achieved. Finally, as
yet more red is added, the remaining, protanomalous, observers will
declare a match at a point where everyone else is seeing the mixed
light as definitely reddish.
- Protanomaly (1% of males, 0.01% of females): Having a mutated form of the long-wavelength (red) pigment, whose peak sensitivity is at a shorter wavelength than in the normal retina, protanomalous individuals are less sensitive to red light than normal. This means that they are less able to discriminate colors, and they do not see mixed lights as having the same colors as normal observers. They also suffer from a darkening of the red end of the spectrum. This causes reds to reduce in intensity to the point where they can be mistaken for black. Protanomaly is a fairly rare form of color blindness, making up about 1% of the male population. Both protanomaly and deuteranomaly are carried on the X chromosome.
- Deuteranomaly (most common - 6% of males, 0.4% of females): Therefore it is equally prevalent in both male & female populations. The OMIM gene code for this mutation is 304000 “Colorblindness, Partial Tritanomaly”.
Clinical forms of color blindness
Total color blindness
Achromatopsia
is strictly defined as the inability to see color. Although the
term may refer to acquired disorders such as color
agnosia and cerebral
achromatopsia, it typically refers to congenital color vision
disorders (i.e. more frequently rod
monochromacy and less frequently cone
monochromacy).
In color agnosia and cerebral achromatopsia, a
person cannot perceive colors even though the eyes are capable of
distinguishing them. Some sources do not consider these to be true
color blindness, because the failure is of perception, not of
vision. They are forms of visual
agnosia.
Red-green color blindness
Those with protanopia, deuteranopia, protanomaly,
and deuteranomaly have difficulty with discriminating red and green
hues. Genetic red-green color blindness affects men much more often
than women, because the genes for the red and green color
receptors are located on the X chromosome, of which men have
only one and women have two. Such a trait is called sex-linked.
Females (46, XX) are red-green color blind only if both their X
chromosomes are defective with a similar deficiency, whereas males
(46, XY) are color blind if their single X chromosome is
defective.
The gene for red-green color blindness is
transmitted from a color blind male to all his daughters who are
heterozygote
carriers and are usually unaffected. In turn, a carrier woman has a
fifty percent chance of passing on a mutated X chromosome region to
each of her male offspring. The sons of an affected male will not
inherit the trait from him, since they receive his Y chromosome and
not his (defective) X chromosome. Should an affected male have
children with a carrier or colorblind woman, their daughters may be
colorblind by inheriting an affected X chromosome from each
parent.
Because one X chromosome is inactivated at
random in each cell during a woman's development, it is possible
for her to have four different cone types, as when a carrier of
protanomaly has a child with a deuteranomalic man. Denoting the
normal vision alleles by P and D and the anomalous by p and d, the
carrier is PD pD and the man is Pd. The daughter is either PD Pd or
pD Pd. Suppose she is pD Pd. Each cell in her body expresses either
her mother's chromosome pD or her father's Pd. Thus her red-green
sensing will involve both the normal and the anomalous pigments for
both colors. Such women are tetrachromats, since they
require a mixture of four spectral lights to match an arbitrary
light.
Blue-yellow color blindness
Those with tritanopia and tritanomaly have
difficulty with discriminating blue and yellow hues.
Color blindness involving the inactivation of the
short-wavelength sensitive cone system (whose absorption spectrum
peaks in the bluish-violet) is called tritanopia or, loosely,
blue-yellow color blindness. The tritanopes neutral point occurs
near a yellowish 570 nm; green is perceived at shorter wavelengths
and red at longer wavelengths. Mutation of the short-wavelength
sensitive cones is called tritanomaly. Tritanopia is equally
distributed among males and females. Jeremy H. Nathans (with the
Howard Hughes Medical Institute) proved that the gene coding
for the blue receptor lies on chromosome 7, which is shared equally
by men and women. Therefore it is not sex-linked. This gene does
not have any neighbor whose DNA sequence is similar. Blue color
blindness is caused by a simple mutation in this gene. (2006,
Howard Hughes Medical Institute).
Prevalence
Color blindness affects a significant number of
people , although exact proportions vary among groups. In
Australia, for example, it occurs in about 8 percent of males and
only about 0.4 percent of females. Isolated communities with a
restricted gene pool sometimes produce high proportions of color
blindness, including the less usual types. Examples include rural
Finland,
Hungary,
and some of the Scottish islands.
In the United States, about 7 percent of the male population – or
about 10.5 million men – and 0.4 percent of the female population
either cannot distinguish red from green, or see red and green
differently (Howard Hughes Medical Institute, 2006). It has been
found that more than 95 percent of all variations in human color
vision involve the red and green receptors in male eyes. It is very
rare for males or females to be "blind" to the blue end of the
spectrum.
Diagnosis
The Ishihara
color test, which consists of a series of pictures of colored
spots, is the test most often used to diagnose red-green color
deficiencies. A figure (usually one or more Arabic
digits) is embedded in the picture as a number of spots in a
slightly different color, and can be seen with normal color vision,
but not with a particular color defect. The full set of tests has a
variety of figure/background color combinations, and enable
diagnosis of which particular visual defect is present. The
anomaloscope, described above, is also used in diagnosing anomalous
trichromacy.
However, the Ishihara color test is criticized
for containing only numerals and thus not being useful for young
children, who have not yet learned to use numerals. It is often
stated that it is important to identify these problems as soon as
possible and explain them to the children to prevent possible
problems and psychological traumas. For this reason, alternative
color vision tests were developed using only symbols (square,
circle, car).
Most clinical tests are designed to be fast,
simple, and effective at identifying broad categories of color
blindness. In academic studies of color blindness, on the other
hand, there is more interest in developing flexible tests (http://www.hubmed.org/display.cgi?uids=15192692,
for example) to collect thorough datasets, identify copunctal
points, and measure just
noticeable differences.
Treatment and management
There is generally no treatment to cure color
deficiencies. However, certain types of tinted filters and contact
lenses may help an individual to distinguish different colors
better. Optometrists can supply a singular red-tint contact lens to
wear in the dominant eye. This may enable the wearer to pass color
blindness tests for certain occupations. The effect of wearing such
a device is akin to wearing red/blue 3D glasses and can take some
getting used to as certain wavelengths can "jump" out and be overly
represented. Additionally, computer
software has been developed to assist those with visual color
difficulties.
The Gnome Desktop provides colorblind
accessibility using the gnome-mag and the libcolorblind software.
Using a gnome applet, the user may switch a color filter on and off
choosing from a set of possible color transformations that will
displace the colors in order to disambiguate the colors. The
software enables, for instance, a color blind person to see the
numbers in the ishihara test.
The National
Eye Institute is doing research into treating/curing color
blindness, and it is now required to donate 5% of its resources to
this cause under instruction of the
National Institutes of Health.
Design implications of color blindness
Color codes
present particular problems for color blind people as they are
often difficult or impossible for color blind people to
understand.
Good graphic
design avoids using color coding or color contrasts alone to
express information, as this not only helps color blind people, but
also aids understanding by normally sighted people. The use of
Cascading
Style Sheets on the world wide
web allows pages to be given an alternative color scheme for
color-blind readers. This color
scheme generator helps a graphic designer see color schemes as
seen by eight types of color blindness. For an example of a map
that could present a significant problem to a color blind reader,
see
this graphic from a recent New York
Times article. The typical red-green color blind reader will
find the green sections of the map nearly indistinguishable from
the orange, rendering the graphic unreadable.
Designers should take into account that
color-blindness is highly sensitive to differences in material. For
example, a red-green colorblind person who is incapable of
distinguishing colors on a map printed on paper may have no such
difficulty when viewing the map on a computer screen or television.
In addition, some color blind people find it easier to distinguish
problem colors on artificial materials, such as plastic or in
acrylic paints, than on natural materials, such as paper or wood.
Thirdly, for some color blind people, color can only be
distinguished if there is a sufficient "mass" of color: thin lines
might appear black while a thicker line of the same color can be
perceived as having color.
When the need to process visual information as
rapidly as possible arises, for example in a train or aircraft
crash, the visual system may operate only in shades of grey, with
the extra information load in adding color being dropped. This is
an important possibility to consider when designing, for example,
emergency brake handles or emergency phones.
Due to this inability to recognize colors such as
red and green, some countries (e.g., Singapore prior
to the 1990s or Romania even to the
present day) have refused to grant individuals with color blindness
driving licenses. In Romania there is an undergoing effort to
remove the legal restrictions that prohibit its colorblind citizens
from getting drivers' licenses.
Misconceptions and compensations
Color blindness is not the swapping of colors in
the observer's eyes. Grass is never red, and stop signs are never
green. The color impaired do not learn to call red "green" and vice
versa. However, dichromats often confuse red and green items. For
example, they may find it difficult to distinguish a Braeburn from a
Granny
Smith and in some cases, the red and green of a traffic light
without other clues (e.g., shape or location). This is demonstrated
in this simulation of the two types of apple as viewed by a
trichromat or by a dichromat.
Anomalous Trichromats are often able to readily
spot camouflage clothing, netting, and paint that has been designed
for individuals with color-normal vision. They tend to learn to see
texture and shape. This lets them see through some camouflage
patterns. In the apple example, above, they will see the clear
difference because the surface pattern is different.
Traffic light colors are confusing to some
dichromats: there is insufficient apparent difference between the
red and amber and sodium street lamps and the green can be confused
with a grubby white lamp. This is a risk factor on a high-speed
undulating road where angular cues can't be used. British Rail
color lamp signals use more easily identifiable colors: the red is
really blood red, the amber is quite yellow and the green is a
bluish color.
Color blindness almost never means complete
monochromatism. In almost all cases, color blind people retain
blue-yellow discrimination, and most color blind individuals are
anomalous trichromats rather than complete dichromats. In practice
this means that they often retain a limited discrimination along
the red-green axis of color space although their ability to
separate colors in this dimension is severely reduced.
It should also be noted that even though some
people are unable to see some or maybe even any of the numbers in
(e.g. red-green) color blindness tests, they might still be able to
tell the difference between the colors in their everyday
lives.
See also
References
Bibliography
External links
Firefox add on for colorblind people https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/5001
- Color Blindness Examples
- Deuteranope Color Blindness Examples (Most common form of Red/Green)
- Color vision deficiency tests and facts
- Colorblind Barrier-Free, contains a proposal for dichromacy safe palette.
- Online Color Blind Selftest
- WhatColor - Naming on-screen colors, handy tool for the color blind (Windows)
- Colorblind Web Page Filter - View Web sites like a color blind person would see them.
tritanopia in Arabic: عمى الألوان
tritanopia in Bulgarian: Цветна слепота
tritanopia in Catalan: Daltonisme
tritanopia in Chuvash: Дальтонизм
tritanopia in Danish: Farveblindhed
tritanopia in German:
Farbenfehlsichtigkeit
tritanopia in Estonian: Värvipimedus
tritanopia in Spanish: Daltonismo
tritanopia in French: Daltonisme
tritanopia in Croatian: Daltonizam
tritanopia in Ido: Kolor-blindeso
tritanopia in Italian: Daltonismo
tritanopia in Hebrew: עיוורון צבעים
tritanopia in Macedonian: далтонизам
tritanopia in Dutch: Kleurenblindheid
tritanopia in Japanese: 色覚異常
tritanopia in Norwegian: Fargeblindhet
tritanopia in Polish: Ślepota barw
tritanopia in Portuguese: Daltonismo
tritanopia in Russian: Дальтонизм
tritanopia in Slovenian: Barvna slepota
tritanopia in Serbian: Далтонизам
tritanopia in Finnish: Värisokeus
tritanopia in Swedish: Färgblindhet
tritanopia in Tamil: நிறக்குருடு
tritanopia in Turkish: Protonopia
tritanopia in Chinese: 色盲