color blindness

     

Color blinness, a color vision deficiency in humans, is the inability to perceive differences between some of the colors that other people can distinguish. It is most often of genetic nature, but may also occur because of eye, nerve, or brain damage, or due to exposure to certain chemicals. The English chemist John Dalton in 1798 published the first scientific paper on the subject, "Extraordinary facts relating to the vision of colours", after the realization of his own color blindness; because of Dalton's work, the condition is sometimes called Daltonism, although this term is now used for a type of color blindness called deuteranopia.

Trivia about color blindness

  • In a 1794 paper John Dalton gave the first description of this optical condition
  • John Dalton did the 1st paper on this condition, some say after being told his brown coat was bright scarlet