The Allure and Prevalence of Brown Eyes: Facts You May Not Know

Do you have brown eyes? If so, you're in good company. Some of the most famous and influential people on earth sport darker peepers, from Oprah Winfrey to Jennifer Lopez, to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Brown-eyed people are some of the most prominent figures in the world.

If you have brown eyes, then you're part of one of the biggest groups in the world. According to The American Academy of Ophthalmology, more than 50% of the world's population has brown eyes. A 2014 poll by The American Academy of Ophthalmology found that more than 45% of people in the US have brown eyes. Uzbekistan is believed to have the largest population percentage of dark-eyed people, with 90.51% of the population of the central Asian country thought to have brown eyes.

Population of Uzbekistan

The shade isn't just the most common color in the world as a whole. Over the years, it's been claimed that eye color can affect everything from health to how good a person is at certain sports. There really are some interesting brown-eyed factoids out there, because having brown peepers is more significant than you might think!

The Science Behind Brown Eyes

"Everyone has melanin in the iris of their eye, and the amount that they have determines their eye color," Dr. Gary Heiting, a licensed optometrist, explained to CNN. It all comes back to melanin. Traditionally, it was more likely for people in hotter climates to have darker eyes because of the need for more melanin to help protect them from the sun.

That changed due to just one person who experienced a mutation. "A genetic mutation affecting the OCA2 gene in our chromosomes resulted in the creation of a 'switch,'" Professor Hans Eiberg from the University of Copenhagen's Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, said to Science Daily. "[That] literally turned off the ability to produce brown eyes." That mutation was then passed down to the next generation, and then the next, and is still going on today in those of us who have lighter eyes.

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Rarity of Brown Eyes in Certain Regions

Despite brown eyes being the most common color worldwide and the number one eye color in so many countries, there are places where having brown eyes is considered rare. As few as 9.22% of the Icelandic population has brown eyes, World Population Review reports, with the most common eye color in the country being blue. In fact, a whopping 74.52% of the population has blue eyes, making brown eyes very much in the minority. But it's not the only place with that kind of divide.

The Uniqueness of Your Brown Eyes

Despite brown eyes being common all around the world, if you have brown eyes, you're the only person in the world who has your exact shade and makeup. Just like a fingerprint, the exact color and hue of your brown eyes is yours and yours only - because no two eye colors on the planet are exactly the same, according to The American Academy of Ophthalmology. The same can be said of all eye colors because there are just so many different mixtures of tones and shades out there.

Though eyes might be classified as brown overall, there are actually countless variations of brown eyes out there. Some people have light brown irises, while others have dark brown eyes that appear almost black. Other people have a shade that's exactly in the middle, and some have brown eyes that lean closer to light or closer to dark with a small amount of other shades mixed in.

Eye Color Changes in Infancy

If you have brown eyes as an adult, that doesn't necessarily mean you were born with them. Fascinatingly, some babies are actually born with blue eyes that then turn brown over time, according to The American Academy of Ophthalmology. That's because melanin develops in the body over time, and usually in infants during their first three years of life. But, of course, there are plenty of babies born with brown eyes who keep their brown eyes.

A 2016 study of newborns found that around two-thirds of the 192 children studied were born with brown eyes, with only one in five of them being born with blue eyes.

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Perception and Personality Traits

If you've got brown eyes, you may be perceived as more trustworthy and kind, at least according to studies. Back in 2013, a study set out to determine if our eye color really affects the way people think of us. The study showed 200 students 80 photos of the faces of men and women with either brown or blue eyes. They were then asked to rate how trustworthy they found them.

But that's not the end of scientists' discoveries. After swapping the eye colors of those found more trustworthy from dark to light, those conducting the study found similar results on who was seen as trustworthy and who wasn't. Because of that, they determined that it may be facial characteristics associated with brown eyes rather than the eyes themselves.

"Brown-eyed individuals tend to be perceived as more trustworthy than blue-eyed ones," the authors of the survey told Scientific American.

That's not the only project that's been conducted to determine the characteristics of brown-eyed stunners. A survey of 1,000 people conducted in 2022 by 1800 Contacts asked respondents to name the personality traits they believed brown-eyed people to have. Amongst the answers?

Makeup Tips for Brown Eyes

The significance of having brown eyes isn't all scientific, though. There are some fun aspects to it, too ... like makeup! While people with lighter eyes may have to be more selective with eye shadow that compliments their eye color, brown-eyed people don't exactly have the same problem.

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"Brown eyes can really take any color shadow, it's just about making sure the tones also complements the skin," Chanel makeup artist Pati Dubroff told InStyle. That's a sentiment Opeyemi Adeyemo, the co-founder of OPV Beauty, agreed with.

But while those with dark eyes pretty much have their pick of the makeup counter, there are still a few tips to note when it comes to getting makeup shades right. Adeyemo noted that those with darker brown eyes should avoid going too dark with their shadow to keep the lid more visible. Hardly anything is off-limits here, but there are a few eyeshadow colors that will really compliment brown peepers.

Beginners Eye Makeup Tutorial | Parts of the Eye | How To Apply Eyeshadow

Health Benefits and Considerations

Did you know that there are actually some health benefits linked with having brown eyes? Though there's still more research to be done on why that's the case, it's believed that the extra melanin in brown eyes offers more protection, similar to the way melanin in the skin can offer more protection from the sun's UV rays.

It's not all good news on the health front. While brown-eyed people may have less of a chance of being diagnosed with some illnesses, that's not the case for everything. A study conducted in 2000 found that people with brown eyes are more likely to develop cataracts, and noted that they should take extra precautions when it comes to being outside in direct sunlight.

Eye Color and Athletic Abilities

Did you know that people with brown eyes may be better at certain sports? Really. The claim is based on a study conducted in 1992, which looked into the link between eye color and reactive motor performance.

Of course, there are always exceptions, but some of the most successful athletes out there have brown eyes, including Mike Tyson, Serena Williams, and Babe Ruth.

Mike Tyson

In comparison, the study found that people with lighter eyes were better at sports that didn't need such a quick reaction time. The theory was also found to have merit back in 1976, when a study tested the reflexes of a group of people with dark eyes compared to people with light eyes.

Eye Color and Therapy

Health and sports pros aren't the only benefits that can come with having brown eyes. A 1984 study set out to find out how people with different colored eyes reacted to different types of therapy and which ones helped them the most. It discovered that the hue of our eyes may actually determine what kind of therapy we're most likely to react well to.

According to the research, children and teenagers with dark eyes tended to respond better to reactive treatment programs than people with lighter eyes. As for those with light eyes?

Of course, it's worth noting that the study is a good few years old now, so needs to be taken with a grain of salt.

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