There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.
Abstract
A computer-controlled test of colour vision is described, in which luminance noise
and masking contours are used to ensure that the subject's responses depend on chromatic
signals. The test avoids the need--common to most computer-controlled tests--to define
equiluminance for the individual subject before the colour test itself can be administered.
The test achieves a good separation of protan and deutan subjects and reveals the
large range of chromatic sensibilities among anomalous trichromats. As a population,
dichromats had higher thresholds on the tritan axis of the test than did normals.
In an extension of the test, full discrimination ellipses were measured for normal
and colour-deficient observers. The nature of anomalous trichromacy is discussed and
the possibility is raised that hybrid genes, resulting from genetic recombination,
may code for incorrectly labelled or functionally impaired molecules.