Symptoms | Color blindness

Symptoms The cones are not only important for color vision, but especially for sharp vision, since the retina contains only cones at the point of sharpest vision, the yellow spot, with which we usually fixate points. The rods do not offer by far the same resolution as the cones, but they are more sensitive to … Symptoms | Color blindness

Relevance for the driver’s license | Color blindness

Relevance for the driver’s license In fact, a color sense disorder rarely leads to a restriction of participation in traffic. Color-blind people are allowed to obtain a driver’s license and drive a car. Color blindness primarily comprises red-green vision deficiencies. Only a complete loss of color sense (achromatopsia) leads to restrictions. In this case there … Relevance for the driver’s license | Color blindness

Color blindness

Synonyms in a broader sense Medical: Achromatopsia, Achromasia Introduction With total color blindness, no colors at all can be perceived, only contrasts (i.e. light or dark). Often red-green blindness is also erroneously called color blindness, although it is a color blindness (color anomaly). A distinction is made between two forms: congenital color blindness and acquired … Color blindness

Red-green weakness

Synonyms in a broader sense red-green blindness, red-green visual impairment, dyschromatopsia, color blindness (ugs), color vision deficiency, abnormal trichromasia, dichromasia Self test red-green weakness Online eye test Amsler grid test Definition The genetically caused red-green weakness is the most common color vision disorder and is often colloquially mistakenly called color blindness. The disease can be … Red-green weakness