- From: Harvey Bingham <hbingham@acm.org>
- Date: Thu, 04 Apr 2002 17:13:37 -0500
- To: w3c-wai-ua@w3.org
From: http://www.eyeassociates.com/images/understanding_the_visual_problem.htm "The macula has the highest concentration of cones, the cells that provide color vision.Thus with the degeneration of the macula, it results in damage to the cone color cells. Patient still see color but color perception may become more and more impaired in advanced macular degeneration." That does not suggest that we cannot use color, just that discrimination among small color changes may be lost. Nor do I read that to suggest that just black and white is appropriate, but that gray-scale differentiation is still useful. I wonder if perceived brightness for different colors is consistent across different manifestations of macular degeneration? Are there better choices (such as color opposites)? If there are any universal recommendations here on perception of gray scale vs color, we should include them, at least by reference. Regards/Harvey Bingham
Received on Thursday, 4 April 2002 17:17:32 UTC