Normal colour vision uses all three types of light cones correctly and is known as trichromacy. People with normal colour vision are known as trichromats. The lack of perceptual sensitivity to certain colours is an anomaly. The different anomalous conditions are protanomaly, is a reduced sensitivity to red light; deuteranomaly, a reduced sensitivity to green light and is the most common form of colour perception deficiency; and tritanomaly, a reduced sensitivity to blue light and is extremely rare. Reduced or absent ability to perceive either red or green light results in very similar visual problems so they are often put together and known as red-green colour blindness.
Colour perception deficiency affects the retina, which is the light-sensitive tissue at the back of the eye. The retina contains two types of light receptor cells, called rods and cones. These cells transmit visual signals from the eye to the brain. Rods provide vision in low light (night vision) while cones provide vision in bright light (daylight vision), including colour vision. There are 3 types of cones, and each is sensitive to the red, green and blue wavelengths of light respectively. The brain determines what colour it is seeing by observing the ratio between the signals it receives from each of the three types of cones. For instance, when the blue cones and the red cones pick up light, the brain then interprets it as purple.
In anomalous colour perception, one or more types of cones in the retina are either partially or completely non-receptive to their particular wavelength of colour and this then affects how the brain interprets colour. For instance, red-green colour blindness (the most common) is caused by the partial or complete inability of either red cones or green cones to perceive their specific colour.