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Protanomaly
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- ... that affect the perception of color. Red-green color vision defects are the most common form of color vision ... shades of red, yellow, and green. Blue-yellow color vision defects (also called tritan defects), which are rarer, cause ...
- ClinicalTrials.gov: Color Vision Defects (National Institutes of Health)National Institutes of Health ... Color Blindness/Clinical Trials ... Color Blindness ... From the National Institutes of Health
- Color Blindness (National Library of Medicine)... rose in full bloom. If you have a color vision defect, you may see these colors differently than most people. There are three main kinds of color vision defects. Red-green color vision defects are the most ...
- ... changes involving the OPN1LW gene cause red-green color vision defects, a form of color vision deficiency that makes ... of red, yellow, and green. Most red-green color vision defects result from structural rearrangements involving the OPN1LW and ...
- ... changes involving the OPN1MW gene cause red-green color vision defects, a form of color vision deficiency that makes ... of red, yellow, and green. Most red-green color vision defects result from structural rearrangements involving the OPN1LW and ...
- ... form of color vision deficiency called blue-yellow color vision defects or tritan defects. These defects cause problems with ... is called tritanopia. A less severe blue-yellow color vision defect called tritanomaly occurs when S cones function abnormally. ...
- What Is Color Blindness? (American Academy of Ophthalmology)American Academy of Ophthalmology ... Color Blindness/Start Here ... Color Blindness ... Color blindness occurs when you are unable to see colors in a normal way. It ...