Color blindness, or color vision deficiency, is caused by a problem with the development of retinal cones resulting in an inability to distinguish some or all colors. It is usually inherited and affects around 8% of men and 0.5% of women of Northern European descent. There are different types of color blindness including total color blindness (monochromacy), partial color blindness (dichromacy affecting red/green or blue/yellow vision), and anomalous trichromacy where one cone is altered. It is diagnosed using color vision tests like the Ishihara test and managed using colored lenses but cannot be cured.