T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
823.1 | Female carries the gene? | FENNEL::MATTIA | | Wed Apr 10 1991 11:15 | 4 |
| I was concerned about the passing on of the gene that causes color
blindness because my husband is color blind. I was told (can't
remember where) that it is the female that carries the gene and passes
it on. Anybody else out there heard this??
|
823.2 | You are a carrier, your son has half a chance, I believe | TLE::MINAR::BISHOP | | Wed Apr 10 1991 11:34 | 11 |
| There are several different kinds of colorblindness, but the most
common kind is sex-linked: the gene for it is on the X chromosome
(if my memory serves me correctly here).
If you're worried, most medical places will have a set of the spot
diagrams used to check colorblindness. Some well-equipped eye-glass
shops have them as well, as might nurses' offices in DEC plants and
schools. Whether your son is old enough to respond to the diagrams
depends a lot on how good he is at numbers and how well he follows
directions.
-John Bishop
|
823.3 | | SCAACT::DICKEY | | Wed Apr 10 1991 13:19 | 6 |
| I have wondered about the same thing with my son. My grandfather is
colorblind as is my cousin, Scott. I heard that the women is the
carrier and was also wondering at what age I would be able to find out
if he is colorblind.
Kathy
|
823.4 | May not be colorblindness | POWDML::SATOW | | Wed Apr 10 1991 13:49 | 14 |
| re: .0
Does your son have trouble identifying ALL colors, or just certain ones? Does
he misidentify colors or does he have trouble remembering the "name" of the
color?
Someone else out there correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe color blind
people have trouble only with certain combinations of colors. If he has
trouble with all colors, or can't remember the name of a color, it could very
well be something other than color-blindedness. I don't find a child of three
who hasn't learned colors yet to be particularly unusual, particularly if he
is closer to two than to four.
Clay
|
823.5 | | PNEUMA::PATTON | | Wed Apr 10 1991 15:03 | 14 |
| * Anecdote alert *
I once had a housemate who was completely colorblind - his whole
world was black, white and gray. If he saw a single flashing traffic
light, he had to guess from the behavior of other cars what color
the light was - he had no clue otherwise. (And in Somerville MA,
the behavior of other cars didn't necessarily help, either.)
This poor guy had a heck of a time choosing clothes. He asked friends
to shop with him, and he would always ask one of us housemates to look
him over before he left the house in case he was wearing some awful
combination. I always felt sorry for him, missing out on colors.
Lucy
|
823.6 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Ask Not for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for ME! | Wed Apr 10 1991 15:09 | 14 |
| It is not at all uncommon for children to be slow about developing
a sense of colour. Actually colour is an extremely difficult concept
to grasp because it is the quality of an object, and not the object
itself. Three is a normal age to start to develop colour awareness.
For our eldest, for the longest time any favourite colour was always
pink. She associated nice things with being pink. As it turns out
she is now very colour sensitive. Our youngest (4 tomorrow) only
developed colour sense about Christmas time and now loves colour.
I wouldn't worry about this for a while yet.
Stuart
|
823.7 | Another level... | ICS::RYAN | | Wed Apr 10 1991 17:50 | 7 |
| There is another level - color confusion. I know it sounds weird - but
I have it. Shades and combinations of red, blue and white *confuse* me. I
can see color - just don't mix it up. Never even knew, until I was
eighteen and the Army rejected me as a pilot candidate after extensive
tests.
FWIW
JR
|
823.8 | here are some probability visuals! | JAWS::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Thu Apr 11 1991 12:38 | 48 |
| Here's what I know of color-blindness genetics. The gene is
recessive and carried on the X chromosome, so men can only inherit
it from their mothers. Women CAN be color-blind, but only if both
of their X chromosomes carry the gene.
If I call a regular X chromosome "X" and a color-blind one "Xc", I
can make up a chart for you. My assumptions are that neither you
nor your husband is color-blind; I'm also assuming for simplicity
that your Mom isn't a carrier.
Your Mom
X X
-----------------
| | |
Y | XY | XY | <-- your brothers, if any
| | |
Your Dad -----------------
| | |
Xc | XXc | XXc | <-- YOU are absolutely
| | | a carrier!
-----------------
YOU
X Xc
-----------------
| | |
Y | XY | XcY | <-- Your SON has 50-50
| | | chance of being C-B
Your husband -----------------
| | |
X | XX | XXc | <-- Your DAUGHTERS have
| | | a 50-50 chance of
----------------- being carriers
I know there are degrees of color-blindness, and I don't know what
determines the "severity." My uncle cannot tell red from green
(apparently they both look to him the way grey looks to us);
another relative just has trouble in dim light distinguishing
between magenta and red-orange, or between teal and royal blue. I
have an aquaintance who sees only black & white (& grey), so he
dresses in only black & white so he'll be seen as he sees himself
(of course, he has to trust the store clerk and his shopping
companions to give him no colors)!
Leslie-who-may-be-a-carrier-and-whose-daughter-definitely-is
|
823.9 | | TPS::JOHNSON | Steven Johnson's Mom | Thu Apr 11 1991 13:14 | 11 |
| I'm probably (very) confused, but here goes...according to
what Leslie says, if my father is color blind, am I automatically
a carrier? Or are my chances of being a carrier just greater
than someone without a colorblind father.
I have a son, what does this mean for his chances of being
colorblind? He's only 17 mos old now, so everything to him
is "Yellow"
thanks,
Linda
|
823.10 | | PERFCT::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Thu Apr 11 1991 13:40 | 13 |
| .0 and .9 - John Bishop in .2 indicates that there are some non-
sex-linked kinds of colorblindness, and I don't know the cause or the
rarity of those kinds. So I shouldn't have said to Joanne "You are
*absolutely* a carrier" unless I also said "IF this is the sex-linked
kind."
Linda, if your Dad's is the sex-linked kind, then the recessive gene is
on his X chromosome, and since you're a girl :-D you have his "Xc" as
well as one of your Mom's Xes. Same profile as Joanne's.
Anybody out there heard any more about the non-X-linked C-B?
L.W.
|
823.11 | | TPS::JOHNSON | Steven Johnson's Mom | Thu Apr 11 1991 13:48 | 4 |
| Thanks Leslie, I forgot that the base noter was in the same
situation...that makes things clearer.
Linda
|
823.12 | I'm sure encyclopedias have good articles on this... | TLE::MINAR::BISHOP | | Thu Apr 11 1991 14:33 | 33 |
| re .10, and others:
There have been articles on the various color-blindnesses in
Scientific American and the like. I'm sure a reference
librarian could help you find more information. What follows
is from memory, based on my reading over a number of years. It
is also simplified, due to my not wanting to write a multi-page
note!
There are three pigments in the eye which sense color. If
you lack any one of them (i.e. have only two), you lose some
colors, but not all--this gives three different kinds of
single-loss color-blindness. If you lack two pigments, you
lose almost all color sense (but I think you retain some based
on the different frequency response of rods and codes...),
and there are three different kinds of double-loss color-blindness.
I suspect you can loose all three and still retain rod-based vision,
which would make yet another kind--but you'd also lose vision
completely in the parts of the retina with cones, so it'd be
just plain blindness rather than color-blindness.
Howver the loss of pigment can be partial, which means more than
one degree of each kind of color-blindness.
Only the "red-green" kind is anywhere near common, and it's the
one which I am sure is sex-linked; the others may be, or they
may not be--I just don't know.
In any case, a 17-month-old who knows even one color name is doing
well--my 18-month-old son has no interest in colors at all, as far
as I can tell, and isn't even consistent about "Mommy" and "Daddy"!
-John Bishop
|
823.13 | Cross-reference to PHYSICS | TLE::MINAR::BISHOP | | Thu Apr 11 1991 14:52 | 3 |
| See also DECWET::PHYSICS, note 160.*, about color and vision.
-John Bishop
|
823.14 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Ask Not for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for ME! | Thu Apr 11 1991 15:13 | 22 |
| I remember seeing something on PBS a couple years ago about a recent
study about colour, and from what I can remember there are now
dubious about the idea of the three colour light sensitivity
theory because of the ability to still distinguish the correct
colours when the clour information is distorted. For example,
take a multi colour scene, cover the scene with a colour filter
and you can still identify the original colours. Weird.
One theory was that contrast played a great role in colour
sensitivity, and the relative frequency differences between the
colours. In a simplified model, it is rather like colour tv
is actually transmitted. While the colour of a picture is
made up of Red Green and Blue signals, what is actually transmitted
is Red, Green and a signal called Luminance which is essentially
brightness, and provides for the compatibility with black and white
tv. The blue signal is recreated by taking the luminance signal
and subtracting R & G from it in the correct proportions.
So, unfortunately it would seem that it is still unclear how colour
vision actually works, and thus how colour blindness occurs.
Stuart
|
823.15 | I must have Alzheimer's ... What's that ? | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Ask Not for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for ME! | Fri Apr 12 1991 11:18 | 17 |
| > Our youngest (4 tomorrow) only
> developed colour sense about Christmas time and now loves colour.
I must be losing it ....
I invented an extra year for my youngest ... she was *3* yesterday
not 4 !
But still, some children are slow at grasping the concept of colour,
and some are also slow at learning colour discrimination.
Since, even if he is colour blind there isn't anything you can
really do, apart from show patience and understanding, I wouldn't
worry too much until about 3 1/2, then have it checked out. That
way you can prepare school teachers well ahead.
Stuart
|
823.16 | Not a scientific test,but it does work | NRADM::TRIPPL | | Thu Apr 18 1991 09:39 | 35 |
| First, thanks to all the scientific theories for colorblindness, I had
no idea it was that involved.
Now in my situation I have a problem distinguising some green and
blues, unless they're side by side. We'll see if AJ has inherited that
from me, since I know I inherited it from my paternal grandmother.
When he was a little over 2 I questioned if he was seeing colors
properly, so I conducted a little "home survey" over the course of a
day or two. When we were at the fire station, which he sees several
times a week thanks to dad and mom working for them part time, I
casually asked what color the various fire trucks and the ambulances
were. He got each color right. I'm not going to argue on the
yellow/green color everyone is doing trucks lately, I'm not really sure
if it's really yellow or green. (By the way that color was invented
*for* colorblind people, since they freqently can't see red, but this
color has been determined it can be seen by colorblind people) He was
able to identify the orange and white of the ambulance, and the things
inside which are red, blue, green and a variety of colors. As we left
the station and headed for the center of town I stopped at a red light,
and asked what color it was, and then what color it was when I could
go. He got both of those right too. Maybe not scientific, but at
least a little reasuring. You could try it with familiar things in
your neighborhood.
On another case, my son's godfather is quite colorblind. His very
understanding and quite organized wife has arranged his clothes in one
color per drawer, or perhaps two colors per drawer; one per side, and
labeled the drawers with colors. By the way, this man was a
firefighter/EMT for many years and now is in management for a hazardous
waste company. Of course hauling hazardous waste requires plaqcarding
trucks with colored indicator cards, but fortunately they also have a
Dept of Transportation reference number too.
Lyn
|