The present paper constitutes a review of the literature on young infants' chromatic discrimination capabilities. A series of early studies showed that infants as young as two months postnatal can make at least some chromatic discriminations between stationary, homogeneous fields of different wavelength compositions. Current studies of spatial and temporal contrast sensitivity functions (CSFs) for red/green isoluminant stimuli suggest that spatial chromatic CSFs show developmental changes in sensitivity and spatial scale, but not curve shape; while temporal chromatic CSFs (tCSFs) show developmental changes in sensitivity and curve shape, but not temporal scale. Infants can also code the direction of motion of moving isoluminant red/green gratings, for both continuous and quadrature motion. The possible mechanisms that underlie infants' chromatic discriminations are discussed. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.