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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Apr 19, 2026

Visualizing Visual Adaptation
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Variability and systematic differences in normal, protan, and deutan color naming.

Balázs V Nagy1, Zoltán Németh2, Krisztián Samu2

  • 1Vision Laboratory, Institute of Psychology, University of São Paulo São Paulo, Brazil ; Department of Mechatronics, Optics and Engineering Informatics, Budapest University of Technology and Economics Budapest, Hungary.

Frontiers in Psychology
|December 25, 2014
PubMed
Summary

Congenital color vision deficiency (CVD) impacts color naming, with significant variability observed in red-green CVD groups. Unexpectedly good naming suggests non-chromatic visual cues aid protans and deutans.

Keywords:
color namingcolor vision deficiencymonochromatic visual stimulationprotan and deutan visionvisual psychophysics

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Area of Science:

  • Vision Science
  • Perception Psychology

Background:

  • Congenital color vision deficiency (CVD) often impairs color naming abilities.
  • Red-green CVD is the most common form, affecting perception of red and green hues.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate color naming properties and uncertainties in a large group of red-green CVD individuals.
  • To compare color naming performance between protans, deutans, and normal color vision.

Main Methods:

  • Utilized quasi-monochromatic stimuli to test color naming.
  • Employed seven basic color terms for the naming tasks.
  • Analyzed color naming variability and statistically significant differences across wavelength ranges.

Main Results:

  • Observed significant variability in color naming for CVD individuals compared to normal vision.
  • Found similar alterations in color naming when comparing protans and deutans.
  • Identified statistically significant differences in specific wavelength ranges between groups.

Conclusions:

  • Red-green CVD individuals exhibit considerable variability in color naming.
  • Protan and deutan groups demonstrated better-than-expected color naming abilities.
  • Non-chromatic visual cues may contribute to color naming in CVD, particularly protans and deutans.