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Summary Of: Eye color

Eye color is an inherited trait influenced by more than one... The actual number of genes that contribute to eye color is unknown at present... single DNA variation cannot explain all the brown eye color variation from dark brown over hazel to blue eyes with brown spots... Eye color usually stabilizes when an infant is around 6 months old... the eye color can appear quite different... the eye color can appear quite different... the eye color can appear quite different... Eye color exists on a continuum from the darkest shades of brown to the lightest shades of... Blue eyes are the second most common eye color in the world... A 2002 study found the prevalence of blue eye color among Whites in the United States to be 33... Green eyes are the rarest natural eye color found in humans... lighter eye color is also associated with an increased risk of ARMD progression... Eye color may also be symptomatic of disease... While changes in eye color of infants are more common... eye color changes are seen... eye color among US whites... Blue eye color in human beings may be caused by a perfectly associated founder mutation in a regulatory... Eye color in skin cancer... A genome scan for eye color in 502 twin families... Eye Color and Human Diseases...

Encyclodia Page On: Eye color

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polygenic | pigments | eye | iris | phenotypic | human eyes | eumelanin | melanocytes | pteridines | purines | carotenoids | epithelium | iris stroma | gene | single nucleotide polymorphisms | hypopigmentation | albinism | freckling | mole | hair | skin tone | regulatory sequence | Schematic representation of different eye colors resulting from different conditions in the iris | | The perception of color depends upon various factors. These are the same eyes; however, depending on the light and surrounding hues, the eye color can appear quite different. | | perception of color | Homo sapiens | autosomal | recessive | Corucia zebrata | dominant | Human amber eyes displaying the yellow pigments. | | lipochrome | pteridines | Great Horned Owl | chromatophores | lipofuscin | A blue eye | | Rayleigh scattering | recessive | intron | promoter | Black Sea | Ireland | Poland | Netherlands | Iceland | Austria | Sweden | Norway | Denmark | Finland | Estonia | Latvia | Portugal | Middle East | Afghanistan | India | Brown human iris | | Light brown human iris | | Baltic Sea | A steel blue-gray eye | | Baltic States | uveitis | Greek | goddess | Athena | owl | Greek | Green eyes | | Europe | Scandinavia | Ireland | Middle East | India | Pakistan | Afghanistan | South America | Colombia | Icelandic | This eye shows a mixture of brown, green and amber colors. | | Some eye colors are too mixed to identify properly, and are identified as hazel for simplicity's sake. | | Rayleigh scattering | Middle East | Europe | North America | Central Asia | Pakistan | Iran | Afghanistan | An example of kaleidoscopic eye coloring | | An example of kaleidoscopic eye coloring. | | kaleidoscope | concentric | starburst | The Beatles | Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds | albinism | melanin | red-eye effect | albinos | age-related macular degeneration | uveal melanoma | whites | jaundice | cirrhosis | hepatitis | malaria | Aniridia | Aniridia: Eyes wherein the irises are not present; the eyes appear to be two large pupils. | | Aniridia | albinism | Transillumination | eye examination | red eye effect | An example of heterochromia. The subject has one brown and one hazel eye. | | An example of sectoral heterochromia. The subject has a blue iris with a brown section. | | Heterochromia | pigment | inherited | disease | injury | melanin | chimerism | Waardenburg syndrome | prostaglandin analogues | David Bowie | Kate Bosworth | Elizabeth Berkley | Anthony Head | Rise Against | Tim McIlrath | Mila Kunis | Demi Moore | prostaglandin analogue | latanoprost | glaucoma | red-eye effect | eyeshine | doi | 2008 | 06-21 | Iridology | Hair color | Human skin color | Xanthophore | List of Mendelian traits in humans | Wikimedia Commons | Categories | Eye | Facial features | Pages with DOIs broken since 2008 |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Eye color".