logologo-optometry

Ishihara's test for colour-blindness

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Catalogue Number: 1649
Ishihara's test for colour-blindness
Category: Equipment
Sub-Category: Colour Vision Test
Designer/inventor: ISHIHARA, Shinobu
Year Of Publication/Manufacture: 1977
Edition: 24 Plates Edition
Time Period: 1940 to 1999
Place Of Publication/Manufacture: Tokyo, Japan
Publisher/Manufacturer: Kanehara Shuppan Co Ltd
Description Of Item: Blue cloth cover, 24 coloured test plates & 10 page user's manual tucked inside rear cover. Business card of William A Cooper, Optometrists 'With Compliments' paper-clipped inside front cover suggests that this Ishihara Test was donated by Melbourne optometrist, Bill Cooper, to The Peninsula School.19.7cm H x 15.4cm W
Historical Significance: Shinobu Ishihara (1879 to 1963) graduated in medicine in 1905 on a military scholarship and immediately joined the army as a doctor, serving mainly as a surgeon. He later changed to ophthalmology. In 1908 he returned to Tokyo University where he dedicated himself to ophthalmic research. In 1910 he became an instructor at the Army Medical College. There, in addition to seeing patients, he conducted research on 'battlefield ophthalmology' and how to select superior soldiers. In 1912 he went to Germany to further his studies in ophthalmology and in 1915, after the outbreak of war, he returned to Tokyo. There he worked as an instructor in the Military Medical School where he was asked to devise a test to screen military recruits for abnormalities of colour vision. His assistant was a colour blind physician who helped him test the plates. The first charts were hand painted by Ishihara in watercolours using hiragana symbols - the most 'Japanese' of the three Japanese scripts. Previous pseudoisochromatic plates existed (eg Stillings) but Ishihara's plates gave more reliable results. In 1917 he made a set using Arabic numerals called the 'International Edition' but few copies were sold. In 1922 Ishihara became a Professor at Tokyo University. In 1929 at the 13th International Congress of Ophthalmology in Holland the International Edition was recommended for testing naval personnel and air force pilots. In 1958 the 'Law of School Health' in Japan required that a colour blindness check be done as part of an overall health check on young school children. The Ishihara test was designated as the official test, and it achieved widespread use within Japan. Ishihara's charts are now the commonest screening test for colour vision anomalies.
How Acquired: Donated by The Peninsula School, Mt Eliza
Date Acquired: 28.10.2010
Condition: Good, stains on front cover
Location: Archive room. East wall

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