Animal colour vision — behavioural tests and physiological concepts
Lund University · The University of Queensland · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Over a century ago workers such as J. Lubbock and K. von Frisch developed behavioural criteria for establishing that non-human animals see colour. Many animals in most phyla have since then been shown to have colour vision. Colour is used for specific behaviours, such as phototaxis and object recognition, while other behaviours such as motion detection are colour blind. Having established the existence of colour vision, research focussed on the question of how many spectral types of photoreceptors are involved. Recently, data on photoreceptor spectral sensitivities have been combined with behavioural experiments and physiological models to study systematically the next logical question: 'what neural…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 10.16
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 229
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Colour Vision
- Color vision
- Phototaxis
- Artificial intelligence
- Psychology
- Object (grammar)
- Cognitive psychology
- Computer vision
- Reduced inequalities
- Peace, Justice and strong institutions