Color Blindness

On GriefCertificate, WardCunningham talks about ColorBlindness and a few other people chimed in. Someone mentioned that 10% of all males are color blind to some degree, but most of them actually have weakness to a colour, not blindness, most common is weakness to green (Deuteranomaly), weakness to red (Protanomaly) being less common. One thing that I wonder about is correlation with other traits. It may sound silly, but I often find out that some of the best technical guys I know are ColorBlind, LeftHanded or both. I don't know whether this is just chance or not.

Isn't ColorBlindness one of those male conditions that comes about because men don't have another X chromosome? Like hemophilia?

Yes, it's recessive. Women can be red-green color blind/weak too, but they'd have to have the "bad" gene on both X chromosomes, which is extremely unlikely, except in areas where it is ununally common.

And if a woman has the gene for DeuteraNomaly on one X chromosome and that for ProtaNomaly on the other, she can be a TetraChromat -- one who can distinguish colors of four wavelengths, as opposed to most humans who can only see three (red, green, and blue).

8 percent of males, 0.5 percent of females - according to http://www.zipmall.com/mpm-art-colorbl.htm -- RobertField Most common type is DeuteraNomaly where the perception of green is shifted towards red.

For the first time, researchers have tracked down the genetic cause of red/green color blindness, a vision defect that affects 1 out of 20 men in the United States. The finding may lead to a blood test for the condition, which is now diagnosed using color charts. --Reuters October 31, 1996. http://www.cactus.org/~kingman/CVDlast.html


Note: Any color blindness test done through your computer monitor will be unreliable, because computer monitors aren't tuned for precisely correct color rendering.


Empirical confirmation: my father is also both ColorBlind and LeftHanded. -- HelmutLeitner

Some red-green deficiency here, right handed. -- CarstenKlapp

My brother is completely ColorBlind (no colours at all), but he's right-handed. Last I heard the thinking on handedness was that it was environmental rather than genetic. Dunno if that's right though. -- AndyPierce

Well being DownUnder? I am ColourBlind ;) and right handed, one of my brothers is left handed and colour blind, he is a better puzzle solver than me. -- AndrewMcMeikan


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