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- Color_blindness abstract "Color blindness, or color vision deficiency, is the inability or decreased ability to see color, or perceive color differences, under normal lighting conditions. Color blindness affects a significant percentage of the population. There is no actual blindness but there is a deficiency of color vision. The most usual cause is a fault in the development of one or more sets of retinal cones that perceive color in light and transmit that information to the optic nerve. This type of color blindness is usually a sex-linked condition. The genes that produce photopigments are carried on the X chromosome; if some of these genes are missing or damaged, color blindness will be expressed in males with a higher probability than in females because males only have one X chromosome (in females, a functional gene on only one of the two X chromosomes is sufficient to yield the needed photopigments).Color blindness can also be produced by physical or chemical damage to the eye, the optic nerve, or parts of the brain. For example, people with achromatopsia suffer from a completely different disorder, but are nevertheless unable to see colors.The English chemist John Dalton published the first scientific paper on this subject in 1798, "Extraordinary facts relating to the vision of colours", after the realization of his own color blindness. Because of Dalton's work, the general condition has been called daltonism, although in English this term is now used more narrowly for deuteranopia alone.Color blindness is usually classified as a mild disability, however there are occasional circumstances where it can give an advantage. Some studies conclude that color blind people are better at penetrating certain color camouflages. Such findings may give an evolutionary reason for the high prevalence of red–green color blindness. And there is also a study suggesting that people with some types of color blindness can distinguish colors that people with normal color vision are not able to distinguish.".
- Color_blindness diseasesdb "2999".
- Color_blindness icd10 "H53.5".
- Color_blindness icd9 "368.5".
- Color_blindness medlineplus "001002".
- Color_blindness meshId "D003117".
- Color_blindness thumbnail US_Flag_color_blind.png?width=300.
- Color_blindness wikiPageExternalLink color.
- Color_blindness wikiPageExternalLink congenital.htm.
- Color_blindness wikiPageExternalLink Glossary.html.
- Color_blindness wikiPageExternalLink www.nosuchthingascolor.com.
- Color_blindness wikiPageExternalLink neil_harbisson_i_listen_to_color.html.
- Color_blindness wikiPageExternalLink colour_blindness.htm.
- Color_blindness wikiPageExternalLink ColorBlindness.shtml.
- Color_blindness wikiPageID "7397".
- Color_blindness wikiPageRevisionID "606692025".
- Color_blindness caption "An 1895 illustration of normal vision and various kinds of color blindness".
- Color_blindness diseasesdb "2999".
- Color_blindness hasPhotoCollection Color_blindness.
- Color_blindness icd "368.5".
- Color_blindness icd "H53.5".
- Color_blindness medlineplus "1002".
- Color_blindness meshid "D003117".
- Color_blindness name "Color blindness or color deficiency".
- Color_blindness wordnet_type synset-disease-noun-1.
- Color_blindness subject Category:Agnosia.
- Color_blindness subject Category:Color.
- Color_blindness subject Category:Genetic_disorders_by_system.
- Color_blindness subject Category:Visual_disturbances_and_blindness.
- Color_blindness type Disease.
- Color_blindness type AilmentCondition.
- Color_blindness type Situation.
- Color_blindness comment "Color blindness, or color vision deficiency, is the inability or decreased ability to see color, or perceive color differences, under normal lighting conditions. Color blindness affects a significant percentage of the population. There is no actual blindness but there is a deficiency of color vision. The most usual cause is a fault in the development of one or more sets of retinal cones that perceive color in light and transmit that information to the optic nerve.".
- Color_blindness label "Color blindness".
- Color_blindness label "Daltonisme".
- Color_blindness label "Daltonismo".
- Color_blindness label "Daltonismo".
- Color_blindness label "Daltonismo".
- Color_blindness label "Farbenfehlsichtigkeit".
- Color_blindness label "Kleurenblindheid".
- Color_blindness label "Ślepota barw".
- Color_blindness label "Дальтонизм".
- Color_blindness label "عمى الألوان".
- Color_blindness label "色盲".
- Color_blindness label "色覚異常".
- Color_blindness sameAs Barvoslepost.
- Color_blindness sameAs Farbenfehlsichtigkeit.
- Color_blindness sameAs Αχρωματοψία.
- Color_blindness sameAs Daltonismo.
- Color_blindness sameAs Daltonismo.
- Color_blindness sameAs Daltonisme.
- Color_blindness sameAs Buta_warna.
- Color_blindness sameAs Daltonismo.
- Color_blindness sameAs 色覚異常.
- Color_blindness sameAs 색각_이상.
- Color_blindness sameAs Kleurenblindheid.
- Color_blindness sameAs Ślepota_barw.
- Color_blindness sameAs Daltonismo.
- Color_blindness sameAs m.022xh.
- Color_blindness sameAs Q133696.
- Color_blindness sameAs Q133696.
- Color_blindness sameAs 256.
- Color_blindness sameAs C0242225.
- Color_blindness wasDerivedFrom Color_blindness?oldid=606692025.
- Color_blindness depiction US_Flag_color_blind.png.
- Color_blindness isPrimaryTopicOf Color_blindness.
- Color_blindness name "Color blindness or color deficiency".