Color Blindness Tests: Ideas & Solutions

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around developing a color blindness test for a biology project, exploring various methods beyond the Ishihara test. Participants share ideas and resources related to testing color perception in individuals with color blindness.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Technical explanation, Conceptual clarification

Main Points Raised

  • One participant suggests using Photoshop to manipulate the hue of a color in two images to assess differences in perception for a color blind friend.
  • Another participant points out the existence of previous threads on color blindness tests, indicating that there may be additional insights available.
  • A third participant shares a resource detailing various forms of color blindness, which could inspire new testing methods.
  • A participant who is color blind mentions their experience with genetic and functional experiments and advises that a proper test should involve multiple individuals with the same type of color blindness and clear perceptual differences.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants do not reach a consensus on a specific testing method, and multiple ideas and resources are presented without resolving which approach is best.

Contextual Notes

Limitations include the potential lack of novelty in test designs and the need for a clear differentiation in perception between color blind and non-color blind individuals.

Who May Find This Useful

Individuals interested in color blindness, biology project development, or testing methodologies may find this discussion relevant.

Euphoriet
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I'm trying to carry out a color blindess test for a biology project. My friend, who is color blind, will help.. but I'm wondering what kind of tets I could use (besides the Ishiraha test).

I'm thinking having two pictures displayed.. and then brining down the "hue" color of a single color in photoshop.. and try to see if he can tell much of a difference between the two images... or see how much the change really affects him?

Any other ideas?
 
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There have been a few threads on this subject here in biology that you might want to search for. I can't do it right now, or else I'd find them for you.
 
This site goes into a lot of detail about colorblindness and it's different forms. It might give you ideas about how to develop a new test. I can't think of any myself.

http://www.firelily.com/opinions/color.html
 
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I'm colorblind myself and have participated in several genetic/functionally-based experiments that took place at my university. These are a few of the interesting colorblind-related sites I have come across. http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/primer/java/humanvision/colorblindness/" .

As far as coming up with your own test, you may not be able to come up with anything completely novel, but you sound like you're on the right track. Also, to do it properly you'll need several individuals that are affected with the same type of colorblindness and several controls, plus try not to make the endpoint too subtle, it should be an obvious difference in perception that differentiates the colorblind from normals.
 
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