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Color blindness
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===Traffic lights=== {{See also|#Driving}} [[File:Salzburg - Gnigl - Eichstraße x Parscher Straße - 2020 01 03-2.jpg|thumb|The lack of standard positional clues makes this light difficult to interpret.]] The colors of [[traffic light]]s can be difficult for the red–green color blindness. This difficulty includes distinguishing red/amber lights from sodium street lamps, distinguishing green lights (closer to cyan) from normal white lights, and distinguishing red from amber lights, especially when there are no positional clues available (see image). [[File:Tipperary Hill - greenoverred Syracuse, New York.jpg|thumb|A famously inverted traffic light in Syracuse, New York]] The main coping mechanism to overcome these challenges is to memorize the position of lights. The order of the common triplet traffic light is standardized as red–amber–green from top to bottom or left to right. Cases that deviate from this standard are rare. One such case is a [[Tipperary Hill#Green over red|traffic light in Tipperary Hill]] in [[Syracuse, New York]], which is upside-down (green–amber–red top to bottom) due to the sentiments of its [[Irish American]] community.<ref>{{cite news|title=New documentary uncovers the Irish links to America's Tipperary Hill|url=http://www.thejournal.ie/tipperary-hill-radio-documentary-3063059-Nov2016/|access-date=15 August 2017|agency=TheJournal.ie|date=6 November 2016|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170815182810/http://www.thejournal.ie/tipperary-hill-radio-documentary-3063059-Nov2016/|archive-date=15 August 2017}}</ref> However, the light has been criticized due to the potential hazard it poses for color blind drivers.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://gizmodo.com/the-story-behind-syracuses-upside-down-traffic-light-1545301615|title=The Story Behind Syracuse's Upside-Down Traffic Light|author=Zhang, Sarah|work=Gizmodo|date=17 March 2014 |url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140916034424/http://gizmodo.com/the-story-behind-syracuses-upside-down-traffic-light-1545301615|archive-date=2014-09-16}}</ref> [[File:Colourblind traffic signal.JPG|thumb|Horizontal traffic light in [[Halifax, Nova Scotia]], Canada]] There are other several features of traffic lights available that help accommodate the color blind. British Rail signals use more easily identifiable colors: The red is blood red, the amber is yellow and the green is a bluish color.{{citation needed|date=June 2022}} Most British road traffic lights are mounted vertically on a black rectangle with a white border (forming a "sighting board"), so that drivers can more easily look for the position of the light. In the [[Eastern Canada|eastern provinces of Canada]], traffic lights are sometimes differentiated by shape in addition to color: square for red, diamond for yellow, and circle for green (see image).
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