International audienceMany animals use camouflage to avoid detection by predators. Camouflage can take several forms, one of which includes brightness matching, a form of crypsis, which occurs when an individual resembles the brightness of their surrounding habitat. Most animals have evolved skin patterning that is fixed and specific to their environment, typically limiting their camouflage abilities to a particular habitat [1]. By contrast, crypsis in cuttlefish is dynamic because they can change their body patterns rapidly (270–730 milliseconds) in response to the visual environment through neural control of pigmented organs known as chromatophores 2, 3. Cuttlefish respond to conflicting visual cues, that is, to different visual informati...
Cuttlefish are cephalopods capable of rapid camouflage responses to visual stimuli. However, it is n...
Juvenile cuttlefish (Sepia officinalis) camouflage themselves by changing their body pattern accordi...
Cuttlefish are cephalopods capable of rapid camouflage responses to visual stimuli. How-ever, it is ...
International audienceMany animals use camouflage to avoid detection by predators. Camouflage can ta...
International audienceCuttlefish visually assess a range of background features to blend in with the...
International audienceCuttlefish visually assess a range of background features to blend in with the...
International audienceCuttlefish visually assess a range of background features to blend in with the...
International audienceCuttlefish visually assess a range of background features to blend in with the...
[[abstract]]Among the changeable camouflage patterns of cuttlefish, disruptive patterning is shown i...
[[abstract]]Cephalopods have at least 20 body patterns for camouflage, yet these can be organized in...
Cuttlefishes of the genus Sepia produce adaptive camouflage by regulating the expression of visual f...
Humans use shading as a cue to three-dimensional form by combing lowlevel information about light in...
The cuttlefish, Sepia officinalis, provides a fascinating opportunity to investigate the mechanisms ...
To achieve effective visual camouflage, prey organisms must combine cryptic coloration with the appr...
AbstractWe tested color perception based upon a robust behavioral response in which cuttlefish (Sepi...
Cuttlefish are cephalopods capable of rapid camouflage responses to visual stimuli. However, it is n...
Juvenile cuttlefish (Sepia officinalis) camouflage themselves by changing their body pattern accordi...
Cuttlefish are cephalopods capable of rapid camouflage responses to visual stimuli. How-ever, it is ...
International audienceMany animals use camouflage to avoid detection by predators. Camouflage can ta...
International audienceCuttlefish visually assess a range of background features to blend in with the...
International audienceCuttlefish visually assess a range of background features to blend in with the...
International audienceCuttlefish visually assess a range of background features to blend in with the...
International audienceCuttlefish visually assess a range of background features to blend in with the...
[[abstract]]Among the changeable camouflage patterns of cuttlefish, disruptive patterning is shown i...
[[abstract]]Cephalopods have at least 20 body patterns for camouflage, yet these can be organized in...
Cuttlefishes of the genus Sepia produce adaptive camouflage by regulating the expression of visual f...
Humans use shading as a cue to three-dimensional form by combing lowlevel information about light in...
The cuttlefish, Sepia officinalis, provides a fascinating opportunity to investigate the mechanisms ...
To achieve effective visual camouflage, prey organisms must combine cryptic coloration with the appr...
AbstractWe tested color perception based upon a robust behavioral response in which cuttlefish (Sepi...
Cuttlefish are cephalopods capable of rapid camouflage responses to visual stimuli. However, it is n...
Juvenile cuttlefish (Sepia officinalis) camouflage themselves by changing their body pattern accordi...
Cuttlefish are cephalopods capable of rapid camouflage responses to visual stimuli. How-ever, it is ...