Whether hiding from predators, or avoiding battlefield casualties, camouflage is widely employed to prevent detection. Disruptive coloration is a seemingly well-known camouflage mechanism proposed to function by breaking up an object’s salient features (such as their characteristic outline), rendering objects more difficult to recognise. However, while a wide range of animals are thought to evade detection using disruptive patterns, there is no direct experimental evidence that disruptive coloration impairs recognition. Using humans searching for computer-generated moth targets, we demonstrate that the number of edge-intersecting patches on a target reduces the likelihood of it being detected, even at the expense of reduced background match...
<div><p>Camouflage is the primary defence of many animals and includes multiple strategies that inte...
Many species employ camouflage to disguise their true shape and avoid detection or recognition. Dis...
Striped patterns are common in nature and are used both as warning signals and camouflage. Their eff...
Whether hiding from predators, or avoiding battlefield casualties, camouflage is widely employed to ...
Whether hiding from predators, or avoiding battlefield casualties, camouflage is widely employed to ...
Numerous animals rely on camouflage for defence. Substantial past work has identified the presence o...
Background Quantifying the conspicuousness of objects against particular backgrounds ...
Disruptive coloration is a camouflage strategy proposed to function by breaking up an animal's bound...
Motion is generally assumed to “break” camouflage. However, although camouflage cannot conceal a gro...
Camouflage is perhaps the most widespread defence against predators in nature and an active area of ...
Nearly all research on camouflage has investigated its effectiveness for concealing stationary objec...
Effective camouflage renders a target indistinguishable from irrelevant background objects. Two inte...
Disruptive camouflage features contrasting areas of pigmentation across the animals’ surface t...
This is the final version Available on open access from the Royal Society via the DOI in this record...
The dataset and scripts associated with this article are in ORE: http://hdl.handle.net/10871/24464Th...
<div><p>Camouflage is the primary defence of many animals and includes multiple strategies that inte...
Many species employ camouflage to disguise their true shape and avoid detection or recognition. Dis...
Striped patterns are common in nature and are used both as warning signals and camouflage. Their eff...
Whether hiding from predators, or avoiding battlefield casualties, camouflage is widely employed to ...
Whether hiding from predators, or avoiding battlefield casualties, camouflage is widely employed to ...
Numerous animals rely on camouflage for defence. Substantial past work has identified the presence o...
Background Quantifying the conspicuousness of objects against particular backgrounds ...
Disruptive coloration is a camouflage strategy proposed to function by breaking up an animal's bound...
Motion is generally assumed to “break” camouflage. However, although camouflage cannot conceal a gro...
Camouflage is perhaps the most widespread defence against predators in nature and an active area of ...
Nearly all research on camouflage has investigated its effectiveness for concealing stationary objec...
Effective camouflage renders a target indistinguishable from irrelevant background objects. Two inte...
Disruptive camouflage features contrasting areas of pigmentation across the animals’ surface t...
This is the final version Available on open access from the Royal Society via the DOI in this record...
The dataset and scripts associated with this article are in ORE: http://hdl.handle.net/10871/24464Th...
<div><p>Camouflage is the primary defence of many animals and includes multiple strategies that inte...
Many species employ camouflage to disguise their true shape and avoid detection or recognition. Dis...
Striped patterns are common in nature and are used both as warning signals and camouflage. Their eff...