By on April 28, 2009, with 108 Comments

Sometimes, optical illusions can serve a purpose. These images might seem familiar to you; look closely. Do they remind you of anything? If you have a driving license, or attended a medical exam at some point in your life, there is a big chance you encountered these during the process. Attached on your left, and below you may find some examples of color blindness test used for testing if person is partially of fully color blind.

If the numbers don’t jump out at you immediately, if you have hard time distinguishing the colors apart, or if you aren’t able to easily distinguish at least a vague guess as to what the number is, then you my friend are unfortunately – color blind.

A version of this test can be seen used in the film Little Miss Sunshine, in which a small girl is playing with the vision test chart with her brother. He is not able to see the numbers, or tell the different colors apart well enough to distinguish the numbers. The boy’s goal was to be a pilot, so when he is made aware that he’s colorblind, the poor kid has a small nervous breakdown. As we already stated, color blindness, or color vision deficiency, is the inability to perceive differences between some of the colors that others can distinguish. It is most often of genetic nature, but may also occur because of the eye, nerve, or brain damage, or due to exposure to certain chemicals.



Before we proceed onto our next example, here is a little history lesson: The English chemist John Dalton published the first scientific paper on the subject in 1798, “Extraordinary facts relating to the vision of colors” 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 specific type of color blindness, called deuteranopia. Below you may see the example how one that is colorblind can’t distinguish the numbers on the card. Don’t be mistaken, color blind people don’t see everything in black and white, I just gave this as a guideline so you can understand their inability.



Color blindness is not the swapping of colors in the observer’s eyes. Grass is never red, and stop signs are never green. The color impaired do not learn to call red “green” and vice versa. However, dichromats often confuse red and green items. For example, they may find it difficult to distinguish a Braeburn from a Granny Smith and in some cases, the red and green of a traffic light without other clues (e.g., shape or location). This is demonstrated in this simulation of the two types of apple as viewed by a trichromat or by a dichromat.

In certain situations, color blindness is classed as a disability. However, color blind people have some advantages over people with normal color vision as well! There are some studies which conclude that color blind individuals are better at penetrating certain camouflages.

On your left, you may see another color vision test card. This one is pretty hard, as some individuals with perfect vision may have problems seeing the number inside it – it is 56 if I’m not mistaken.

Hope we learned something useful today. Before I conclude this article, there are some more vision test examples for you to enjoy:


And then some more… Examples below are much bigger in size. If you had no problem recognizing previous numbers, but have more problem distinguishing these, don’t be afraid – it has nothing to do with color blindness. Probably its just that your eyes can’t capture the whole image at once.


This post was written by Vurdlak, with additional help from Vernon Southward of Macro Photography. If you would like to have your article appear on Mighty Optical Illusions as well, feel free to contact us.

Comments

108 Responses
  1. Poodleinacan says:

    You what is worst then daltonism? It’s Albinism. Those who have that aren’t very lucky…
    Hopefully I’ve got no vision problem….exept some myope (not anought to wear glasses).

    At my college,in the tech. am studying in (multimedia), there is a color-blind guy(for him, he has problems with brun-like colors). It’s does make him unable to do the works, it only makes his work have intresting colors.

  2. Poodleinacan says:

    Oh, and by the way, for those who are colorblind, the first enlarge picture’s image isn’t a number… It’s like an reversed S with both ends going at an extremity of the cercle…

  3. lindsay says:

    let’s see…. in reading order we have -
    5
    68
    58 18
    L 12
    10 (not suposed to be anything)
    57 (not suposed to be anything)
    apples….

    56
    7 6
    26 73
    74 45

    a badly formed “8″

    12

    • Phoebus says:

      Where some people are saying they see L 12 I see E 17. But I can kinda see how you get L 12.

  4. TWed50 says:

    I can now safely say that I am not color blind.

  5. scarlett says:

    i could read all of them accept for the second last one :(

  6. kapil dev singh says:

    hey frnds,
    i want to join army and i trying my to do my best. my preparation is also going on but i am Deuteronomy colorblind .
    plz give me suggestion if any one have to make my dream true.
    THANKS

  7. I can see all the numbers! Yes

  8. enlightenment says:

    isshi36 optical illusion is a PATH to trace.

    Can you trace a line from one “X” to the other? Someone with normal color vision will trace a orange/brown purple line and those with a slight deficiency will follow a different path.

    The “X”s are located outside the circle at the 3 o’clock and 9 o’clock positions.

  9. trisha says:

    2 up and 12 in the bottom

  10. trisha says:

    no i think its 5 the first one not 2

  11. Keith says:

    I am red/green colour blind which I understand is quite common particularily in males.
    I also understand that blue /yellow colour blindness is very rare.
    Can any body then explain to me why phone chargers etc. turn from red to green when charged or why on TV quiz the correct answer to a question is highlighted green and the incorrect answer is highlighted red.
    I understand the logic that we all know red means danger therefore “stop” and green means all clear therefore “go” but why can’t the colours yellow and blue be used in the examples given above, so that life is made a little easier for us.

    • Sanja says:

      You’re right about that. Actually, they usually use red vs. green because those two colours appear very different, in fact even the opposite, to a person with normal colour vision. Since colour-blind people are still a minority, nobody really takes that into consideration, which is wrong. However, red is the most intense and the most noticable colour to a person with normal vision, hence why it’s always used for danger etc., since it really sticks out and catches our eyes right away. That is not particularly true for blue or yellow. I have to admit that the world would look very poor without red and it’s hard to imagine what it’s like to be colour-blind.

  12. Vepa says:

    I saw everything ^^ oh jeah

  13. Konrad says:

    F… them our world is right

  14. Sure says:

    I can see them all normally, though some are harder to distinguish than others. However, I find the numbers easier to distinguish when I slightly unfocus my eyes, anyone know the reason for this? I could take a guess, something about focusing on the whole thing, rather than on just the details? But does anyone actually KNOW?
    Also, if you unfocus your eyes slightly and stare at the black and white image of the number 10, you can just about make it out, or maybe I’m hallucinating. Does anyone else see it?

  15. i cant see the one under 58, is it a 3? please answer, if it isnt a 3 does that mean im partly colour blind?

  16. Laurel says:

    is the one 58 an E? thats what i see..

  17. alex says:

    5
    68
    E 17
    10
    37
    red 3 apples
    olive 3 apples
    highlight green apple dark green/yellow apple
    56
    7 6
    26 73
    74 45
    -wide 8-
    12

  18. poo says:

    I can only see 3 of them, from which one of them almost vaguely. For the rest,I can distinguish no number, nothing in the circles.

    I’m colorblind and I’ve known this sinnce my childhood. The sad thing is that I’m a female and colorblindness is rare in females!!!

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