Protanopia is a form of colourblindness, which renders it difficult for the sufferer to distinguish between red and green.
Protanopia
Red and shades of red like violet, lavender, and purple
There are several types of color blindness.Total color blindnessPartial color blindnessThe partial cases can be broken down into:Red-greenDichromacy (protanopia and deuteranopia)Anomalous trichromacy (protanomaly and deuteranomaly)Blue-yellowDichromacy (tritanopia)Anomalous trichromacy (tritanomaly)
You must be lying. There's no type of colorblindness that would make one confusing red and blue. Green and red yes, blue and green yes, and sometimes blue and purple, but not red and blue. No matter what type of colorblindness you have, whether it's protanopia, deuteranopia, or tritanopia, blue and red would look different.
1 in 12 people have some sort of color deficiency. About 8% of men and 0.4% of women in the US. 0.38% of women are deuteranomalous (around 95% of all color deficient women). 0.005% of the population are totally colour blind. 0.003% of the population have tritanopia. Protanomaly occurs in about 1% of males. Deuteranomaly occurs in about 5% of males. It's the most common color deficiency. Protanopia occurs in about 1% of males. Deuteranopia occurs in about 1% of males.
* 1 in 12 people have some sort of color deficiency. About 8% of men and 0.4% of women in the US. * 0.38% of women are deuteranomalous (around 95% of all color deficient women). * 0.005% of the population are totally colour blind. * 0.003% of the population have tritanopia. * Protanomaly occurs in about 1% of males. * Deuteranomaly occurs in about 5% of males. It's the most common color deficiency. * Protanopia occurs in about 1% of males. * Deuteranopia occurs in about 1% of males.
There are several types of color blindness.Total color blindnessPartial color blindnessThe partial cases can be broken down into:Red-greenDichromacy (protanopia and deuteranopia)Anomalous trichromacy (protanomaly and deuteranomaly)Blue-yellowDichromacy (tritanopia)Anomalous trichromacy (tritanomaly)
Not being able to see color in some cases. Mild color blindness might just be an inability to distinguish between colors like green and red. That is sometimes the case, not always. Did you know that 99% of all color blind people are not actually color blind, but color deficient? Does that help?
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there are 1000005000 kinds of blindnesses
Different disorders can affect your vision differently . Normally , a person would be able to see all the colors of the rainbow , but with different forms of color-blindness , the person can only see greenish-yellowish colors , or just pink , red , and blue . It really just depends on which receptors you're missing . (those little things in your eye that help you decifer what color an object is) Men and not women are prone to this sight problem