No, you can only dream in what you perceive while awake.
What you see depends on the type of color blindness.
There are monochromats (people with only one cone type) who see only in black and white, only able to determine changes in luminance/brightness.
There are also, the more common, dichromats (individuals with 2 cone types) who can perceive a limited amount of colors, with the subcategories of red-green and blue-yellow colorblindness.
A person with normal color vision has 3 cone types.
no color blind people are mainly red-green colorblind or less commonly blue-yellow colorblind
Yes, anyone can be colorblind regardless of their race. Colorblindness is a genetic condition that affects the ability to distinguish certain colors, and it is not specific to any particular racial group.
There is no such thing as a colorblind object. There are color blind people, and all object reflect they just reflect differently based on how smooth the surface is.
No. Some people are colorblind so they only see black/white/gray.
Most people dream in color. Studies have shown that about 80% of people dream in color while the remaining 20% may dream in black and white or shades of gray.
Dogs are not completely colorblind, but they have limited color vision. They primarily see in shades of blue and yellow, and may have difficulty distinguishing between red and green.
100% of all male offspring will be colorblind. 0% of all femal offspring will be colorblind.
Contrary to popular belief, only a rare percentage colorblind people can only see in black and white. More commonly, colorblind people difficulty telling two colors apart, or being able to identify what color an object is. Colorblind people don't see anything "wrong", their perception of color is just slightly different. Only in a minority of colorblind people is colorblindness a major disability. Common colours to not be able to distinguish between are green and red, blue and orange.
1) Rats are the only mammals that can only see shades of gray 2)People with green red color blindness can spot out things that are camo than people that aren't colorblind 3)Dogs aren't colorblind
=They dont see any color all they see is black and white i believe.=
The same for a person who is not colorblind
"Color blind" people... except for a very small minority... can actually see color, there are certain specific shades they have difficulty telling apart (which ones specifically depend on the type of color blindness they have). A substantial fraction of normally sighted people do not usually dream in color. It's possible that a color-blind person could dream of being able to see shades they normally cannot. However, without a frame of reference, they wouldn't actually be seeing those shades, they'd just think they could. (Someone who became colorblind might see shades they remembered from before they were colorblind... though colorblindness is usually a genetic hereditary condition, not something you "get" later in life.)