Traffic signal color recognition is a problem for both protan and deutan color-vision deficients.

Author(s)
Atchison, D.A. Pedersen, C.A. Dain, S.J. & Wood, J.M.
Year
Abstract

This paper investigates the effect of color-vision deficiency on reaction times and accuracy of identification of traffic light signals. Participants were 20 color-normal and 49 color-deficient males, the latter divided into subgroups of different severity and type, and were assigned to performing a tracking task. At random intervals, stimuli simulating standard traffic light signals were presented against a white background at 5 deg right or left. Subjects identified stimulus color (red/yellow/green) by pressing an appropriate response button. Mean response times for color normals were 525, 410, and 450 ms for red, yellow, and green lights, respectively. For color deficients, response times to red lights increased with increase in severity of color deficiency, with deutans performing worse than protans of similar severity: response times of deuteranopes and protanopes were 53% and 35% longer than those of color normals. A similar pattern occurred for yellow lights, with deuteranopes and protanopes having increased response times of 85% and 53%, respectively. For green lights, response times of all groups were similar. Error rates showed patterns similar to those of response times. Contrary to prior studies, deutans performed much worse than protans of similar severity.

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Publication

Library number
I E829052 /83 / ITRD E829052
Source

Human Factors. 2003. Fall 45(3) pp495-503 (7 Fig., 1 Tab., Refs.)

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