0000000000007599
AUTHOR
M. D. De Fez
Visual defects in subjects with Down’s syndrome
Because the incidence of other visual defects is much higher in cases of Down’s syndrome than in individuals with other forms of retardation (Gardiner, 1967; Aitchison et al., 1990), we tested the color vision of a population of Down’s syndrome patients, using Ishihara plates and the Davico anomaloscope. The Down’s syndrome group had a significantly higher proportion of color deficiencies than either normal controls or a matched mentally retarded population. Refractive errors were corrected with static retinoscopy, and spatial contrast sensitivity was measured with the Vistech test.
Vision evaluation in people with Down's syndrome.
We tested the colour vision of 72 people with Down's syndrome using the Ishihara test and an anomaloscope. We found that 13 of the subjects, 6 males and 7 females, had defective colour vision according to Pickford's classification. In monocular vision 10 eyes were protan (five simple, three extreme and two deviant), one eye was simple deuteranomalous and the remaining eyes were normal: in binocular vision four of the subjects were protan (two simple and two deviant), two subjects were deutan (one simple and one deviant) and the rest were normal. Many of our subjects had lens opacities, strabismus, nystagmus, hypermetropia, high myopia and astigmatism, confirming literature reports. The cont…
Color memory matching in normal and red-green anomalous trichromat subjects
The methods of simultaneous and successive color matching have been studied for a set of seven color reference samples by 15 protanomalous and 21 deuteranomalous trichromat subjects. From comparison between both populations and a group of 25 trichromat normal ones, investigated previously under similar experimental conditions [J. Perez–Carpinell et al. Color memory matching: time effect and other factors. Color Res Appl 1998;23:234–247], we can deduce the following. (a) For anomalous trichromat populations, as with a normal one, we find significant differences between simultaneous and successive color matching, p < 0.05. (b) If we consider the average of all the colors, we find that, while …
Familiar objects and memory color
This research was supported in part by a grant from ADEIT- Universitat de Valencia and IMPIVA to M.D. de F.
Color memory matching: Time effect and other factors
The methods of simultaneous and successive, or memory, color matching have been compared for 10 color reference samples distributed in two groups each performed by 50 observers (25 men and 25 women). Our results, obtained with a total of two hundred Munsell color chips arrayed on ten gray cardboard panels, indicate that: (a) while by simultaneous matching the mean color differences obtained are, in most cases, lower than 1 CIELAB unit, those obtained by memory are generally higher; (b) the worst remembered colors are yellow, light green, blue, and pink, and the best remembered color is orange; (c) the influence of the delay time (15 s, 15 min, and 24 h) is significant for the remembered mea…