The "normal" color blindness is red-green, not blue-green. That would also explain why you could see the yellow shapes, but not the red ones in a green background or the green ones in a red background. The vast majority of color blind people are red-green color blind. My grandfather was red-green color blind, so I've studied up on it. Luckily, I don't have that problem.colchar wrote:
My colour vision is so bad that I think I am worse than the normal blue-green colour blindness.
Everyone can check out the links below and see how their colour vision is.
Here is the link to the first test:
http://colorvisiontesting.com/online%20 ... d%20answer
Here are my results for this first test:
Original plate – I can see all three shapes
Card #1 – I can see the square
Card #2 – I can see the circle
Card #3 – I can’t see anything
Here is the link to the second test:
http://colorvisiontesting.com/ishihara.htm
Here are my results for the second test:
Demonstration plate – I can see the number 16
First plate – I can’t see anything
Second plate – I can’t see anything
Third plate – I can’t see anything
Fourth plate – I can’t see anything
Fifth plate – I can’t see anything
Sixth plate – I can’t see anything
Seventh plate – I can’t see anything
Eighth plate – I can’t see anything
I have a TINY bit of trouble with blue, but that's because I have an eye condition. I have extra light rods, but fewer blue cones. My night vision is better than most people's, but I don't see blue QUITE as well as most, but I'm not color blind. It's more like I have trouble distinguishing between CLOSE shades of blue than that I can't see blue (don't worry, I CAN see the difference between Duke blue and Carolina blue. However, I have trouble seeing the difference between, say, Carolina blue and the blue on the old Houston Oiler jerseys.)
For the record, I saw on the plates in the second test: 2, 5, 42, 7, 29, 6, 57, and 10.