Men More Prone To Color Blind Than Women

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Jan 27, 2017 12:41 PM EST

Men tend to become color blind more than women and around one in every 20 people is color blind.  This condition lets the person see all the colors dull but those who are not color blind it is difficult to imagine how the world look like to the color blind.

The experts say that the causes of color blind can be different. For the most of the population suffering from color blindness, the condition is genetic and inherited from their mom. Some diseases also induce color blindness in people like diabetes, multiple sclerosis, aging or medication according to Color Blind Awareness.

Many people may not realize that their vision of the colors is not accurate. Actually, there are four different kinds of color blindness which are not particularly good. These are known as protanopia, dueteranopia, tritanopia and achromatopsia, reports Daily Mail.

Protanopia people confuse black with shades of red, dark orange and dark red, dark brown with dark green, mid-greens with some oranges, some blues with some reds and purples and dark pinks. Deuteranopia  confuse blue-greens with gray and mid-pinks, mid-reds with mid-greens, pale pinks with light grey and bright greens with yellows. Tritanopia  are more likely to confuse oranges with reds, mid-greens with blues, dark purples with black and light blues with greys. For Achromatopsia the situation is worst as they can see only black and white.

There are glasses or normal vision designed by the firm EnChroma. There is online test also offered by the company to check whether a person is color blind or no.

A firm called EnChroma - that makes glasses designed to give the color blind 'normal' vision - has created an online test to reveal whether a person is able to see the world in all the colors available to the human eye. At the end of the test, a user is given the answer if he is color blind or no. 

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