someone who is colorblind puts on special glasses, and suddenly they can see the world
in all its colorful glory!
Some people freak out, some people cry, some people can't stop staring at colors they say
they've never seen.
When we first heard about this, we were like we need to make a video about that immediately!
And then we spend years basically, trying to get to the bottom of it.
And this is the culmination of that.
Thank you, to our writing staff.
But the glasses don’t just, like, turn on a bunch of new colors for colorblind people.
And when people put the glasses on, they aren’t suddenly seeing the world the way people with
normal color vision do.
The glasses just filter light in a way that makes it easier for people with certain types
of colorblindness to tell the difference between colors.
If someone’s colorblind, that means something’s up with the cones in their eyes — the photoreceptors
that detect color.
There are three types of cones: for seeing short, medium and long wavelengths, which
roughly correspond to blue, green, and red.
There are lots of different types of colorblindness, and in almost all of them, people can see
at least some colors.
The exception is monochromacy, where people don’t have any cones at all and they see
the world in black, white, and grey.
But that is incredibly rare — only about 1 in 30,000 people have it.
There’s also dichromacy, where one type of cone is missing.
Where someone is missing all of their green cones, for example, they see the world in
just blues and yellows.
But it's a lot more common to have what’s known as anomalous trichromacy: where you
have all three cones, but one type gets activated by the wrong wavelengths.
About 6.3% of men, and 0.37% of women, have anomalous trichromacy.
And in the vast majority of those people, it’s their red or green cones that are affected,
which is why most colorblind people confuse green and red.
In deuteranomaly, the green cones detect wavelengths that are too high — so, on the redder end
of the spectrum.
Red light activates both red and green cones, which the brain interprets as a kind of yellowish color.
Protanomaly is kind of the opposite: the red cones detect wavelengths that are too low,
so green light can activate the red cones.
Either way, the red and green cones are activated by similar wavelengths, so there’s confusion
around red and green, which can both look yellowish.
Like, it might be kind of hard to tell the difference between a lemon and a lime, or
between red and green peppers.
But there are a couple of ways to help colorblind people tell the difference between colors,
even without fancy glasses.
Like with an app that changes the colors for you.
If you were trying to figure out which peppers were the red ones, you could pull out your
phone and hold the camera up to them, and the app would detect the red peppers and change
them to a color that would be easier to distinguish, like pink.
Some apps and video games have settings that’ll do something similar — so you don’t confuse
the enemies outlined in red with the people on your team outlined in green, for example.
There are also colorblind-friendly contact lenses.
You wear a special contact lens in just one eye, which is usually tinted deep red so it
blocks out a lot of green light.
Green objects will look much darker through the tinted lens, so by comparing what you
see with each eye, it’s easier to tell the difference between green and red.
These lenses can help you pass tests for colorblindness, like the ones where you check which number
you see in different-colored dots, and it can also help people in some specific jobs,
like electricians.
You don’t want to get the wires wrong, when you’re an electrician.
Some people who’ve used these lenses say that they do start to see green and red differently.
But they don’t really correct color vision.
The glasses that spawned all those viral videos, on the other hand, do try to correct color vision.
They’re designed to solve the problem of the cones overlapping, so colors don’t activate
the wrong cones.
They only work for the types of red-green color blindness where you have all three cones,
though — so either deuteranomaly or protanomaly.
The key is to block the specific wavelengths that are causing the most confusion — so
the wavelengths of red and green that trigger both the red and green cones.
The glasses use what’s known as multi-notch filtering, where they’re embedded with rare
earth metals that absorb certain wavelengths of light, leaving just the wavelengths that
a colorblind person’s eyes have an easier time distinguishing.
So red things will be more red, and green things will be more green, making it easier
to distinguish between them.
That's also what happens if someone with regular vision wears the glasses — they’ll see
the primary colors of light much more vividly.
But for colorblind people, the glasses will only work if their colorblindness isn't too severe.
If their cones overlap too much, there's not much these glasses can do, because they won’t
block all the wavelengths that trigger both types of cones.
On the other hand, some of the people that the glasses do work for say that they can
see colors they never have before — like certain shades of purple.
People with normal color vision see purple when there’s a mix of red and blue wavelengths
reaching their eyes.
But with deuteranomaly, part of the red light activates the green cones, which muddies the color.
It’s possible that with the glasses blocking the wavelengths of light that activate the
green cones, people can see shades of purple they wouldn’t otherwise be able to see.
Of course, the glasses can not cure color blindness, because nothing has physically
changed about your eyes or your cones.
But for the people in those viral videos, the world really does look different — though
I was skeptical of that at first.
Although, it does not look exactly the same as the way people with normal color vision see it.
Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow!
If you’re interested in learning more about the science of vision, check out our video
on why so many people need glasses these days — aka the nearsightedness epidemic.