yellow-blue dichromacy
A person with yellow-blue dichromacy sees a yellow flower as the same color as the clear sky.
Noun: A type of color vision deficiency (dichromacy) characterized by an inability to distinguish well between yellow and blue hues. It is a specific form of color blindness where one of the three types of cone cells in the retina, typically those sensitive to short (blue) or long (red/green) wavelengths, is missing or non-functional, leading to a two-dimensional color perception.
This is a technical, medical term used in ophthalmology, optometry, and related scientific fields. - It describes a specific diagnosed condition. - It is used in formal or academic contexts rather than everyday conversation.
- The optometrist diagnosed the patient with yellow-blue dichromacy after a series of color plate tests.
- Yellow-blue dichromacy is less common than red-green color blindness.
- His yellow-blue dichromacy meant he often confused the color of the sky with certain shades of grey or yellow.
- The term can be broken down into its components for explanation: "dichromacy" refers to vision based on only two (di-) primary colors (-chromacy), and "yellow-blue" specifies the axis of confusion.
- In genetics, yellow-blue dichromacy is often linked to defects in genes coding for the S-cone (short-wavelength/blue) photopigments.
- Tritanopia: A more specific clinical term for the most severe form of yellow-blue dichromacy, involving the complete absence of S-cones.
- Tritanomaly: A related but less severe condition involving defective, not absent, S-cones, causing weakened discrimination between blue and yellow.
- Dichromacy: The general category of color blindness involving only two functional cone types.
- Color vision deficiency (CVD): The broader, more general term encompassing all types of color blindness, including yellow-blue dichromacy.
- Tritan defect (clinical synonym)
- Blue-yellow color blindness (descriptive synonym, order of colors may vary)
- Trichromacy (normal color vision using three cone types)
- Normal color vision
This term refers specifically to the confusion or inability to distinguish between colors on the yellow-blue axis. It does not mean the person sees the world only in yellow and blue; rather, their perception of these colors and associated hues (like violet, cyan, and greenish-yellow) is altered or indistinct.
A person with yellow-blue dichromacy sees a yellow flower as the same color as the clear sky.
- confusion of yellow and blue