Children can see colour vision by about six months. As a child grows, parents may notice that their child can’t differentiate between colours. Colour vision deficits are an inherited gene, and parents may be even more aware that their child may have a colour vision deficit because of this. Though the “red-green” colour vision confusion […]
Men have a much higher risk than women for colour vision deficiency. Red-green colour blindness is by far the most common type – it is found in approximately 8% of males and around 0.4% of females. This bias is because the genes that lead to red-green CVD are on the X chromosome, with males having […]
Colour Vision Deficiency makes it difficult to see some colours or to tell some apart from others. The condition affects more than one in 20 males and a smaller but significant number of females in Australia. In the world, it affects one in eight males. There are several tests you can find online (click here […]
Very few people are actually colour blind, and colour deficient is a better way of looking at it. You might see some colours but not others and other times you might guess the colour because of learned knowledge as opposed to actual learned knowledge. If symptoms are very mild, you may not even be aware […]