Do EnChroma glasses improve color vision for colorblind subjects?
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Gómez Robledo, Luis; Valero Benito, Eva María; Huertas Roa, Rafael; Martínez Domingo, Miguel Ángel; Hernández Andrés, JavierEditorial
Optical Society of America
Fecha
2018-10-19Referencia bibliográfica
Gómez-Robledo, L., Valero, E. M., Huertas, R., Martínez-Domingo, M. A., & Hernández-Andrés, J. (2018). Do EnChroma glasses improve color vision for colorblind subjects?. Optics express, 26(22), 28693-28703.
Patrocinador
Spanish State Agency of Research (AEI); Ministry for Economy, Industry and Competitiveness (MIMECO) (Grant numbers FIS2017-89258-P and DPI 2015-64571-R); European Union FEDER (European Regional Development Funds).Resumen
The commercialization of EnChroma glasses has generated great expectations for
people to be able to see new colors or even correct color vision deficiency (CVD). We
evaluate the effectiveness of these glasses using two complementary strategies for the first
time. The first consists of using the three classical types of tests — recognition, arrangement
and discrimination — with and without glasses, with a high number of individuals. In the
second, we use the spectral transmittance of the glasses to simulate the appearance of stimuli
in a set of scenes for normal observers and observers with CVD. The results show that the
glasses introduce a variation of the perceived color, but neither improve results in the
diagnosis tests nor allow the observers with CVD to have a more normal color vision.