are you color blind?

Philippines
April 30, 2007 10:55pm CST
they say that men have the more tendency to be color blind more than women. however, i am a woman and sometimes, i am color blind. i confuse yello with orange and black with brown. this can be quite embarassing but i dont know how it happened to me. i just became color blind. but im not really totally color blind, ok? what about you guys? are you a bit color blind also?
1 response
@mypchere (582)
• Indonesia
1 May 07
No i am not color blind. 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 demage 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 reffered to as "red-green color blindness", though the term is an over-simplification and 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 distinguis any color from grey, as in a black-and-white movie or photograph.