AbstractHumans lose colour vision at night and it has often been assumed that this happens to other animals as well. It is not true of nocturnal moths, however: a recent study has shown that the elephant hawk moth makes use of trichromatic colour vision when seeking flowers by starlight
Colour discrimination is based on opponent photoreceptor interactions, and limited by receptor noise...
Abstract Night vision is ultimately about extracting information from a noisy visual input. Several...
Honeybees, like humans and most other vertebrates, are colour-blind in dim light. Bees are primarily...
AbstractHumans lose colour vision at night and it has often been assumed that this happens to other ...
Humans are colour-blind at night, and it has been assumed that this is true of all animals. But colo...
Humans lose colour vision at night and it has often been assumed that this happens to other animals ...
The ability to see colour at night is known only from a handful of animals. First discovered in the ...
The dual retina of humans and most vertebrates consists of multiple types of cone for colour vision ...
Recent studies have shown that certain nocturnal insect and vertebrate species have true color visio...
Despite their tiny eyes and brains, nocturnal insects have remarkable visual abilities. Recent work-...
SummaryHoneybees, like humans and most other vertebrates, are colour-blind in dim light. Bees are pr...
Humans and most vertebrates have duplex retinae with multiple cone types for colour vision in bright...
AbstractSome eyes work better in the dark than others. The apposition type of compound eye that bees...
SummaryColour vision in humans is ‘middling’ at best, both figuratively and literally in the animal ...
SummaryThe intensity threshold of colour vision has been behaviourally tested in birds; the results ...
Colour discrimination is based on opponent photoreceptor interactions, and limited by receptor noise...
Abstract Night vision is ultimately about extracting information from a noisy visual input. Several...
Honeybees, like humans and most other vertebrates, are colour-blind in dim light. Bees are primarily...
AbstractHumans lose colour vision at night and it has often been assumed that this happens to other ...
Humans are colour-blind at night, and it has been assumed that this is true of all animals. But colo...
Humans lose colour vision at night and it has often been assumed that this happens to other animals ...
The ability to see colour at night is known only from a handful of animals. First discovered in the ...
The dual retina of humans and most vertebrates consists of multiple types of cone for colour vision ...
Recent studies have shown that certain nocturnal insect and vertebrate species have true color visio...
Despite their tiny eyes and brains, nocturnal insects have remarkable visual abilities. Recent work-...
SummaryHoneybees, like humans and most other vertebrates, are colour-blind in dim light. Bees are pr...
Humans and most vertebrates have duplex retinae with multiple cone types for colour vision in bright...
AbstractSome eyes work better in the dark than others. The apposition type of compound eye that bees...
SummaryColour vision in humans is ‘middling’ at best, both figuratively and literally in the animal ...
SummaryThe intensity threshold of colour vision has been behaviourally tested in birds; the results ...
Colour discrimination is based on opponent photoreceptor interactions, and limited by receptor noise...
Abstract Night vision is ultimately about extracting information from a noisy visual input. Several...
Honeybees, like humans and most other vertebrates, are colour-blind in dim light. Bees are primarily...