Licht-im-Terrarium: Literaturdatenbank

WIKINDX Resources

Vorobyev, V. (2003). Coloured oil droplets enhance colour discrimination. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London - Biological Sciences, 270, 1255–1261. 
Added by: Sarina (2008-12-16 20:27:08)   Last edited by: Sarina (2009-04-06 15:37:11)
Resource type: Journal Article
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2003.2381
BibTeX citation key: Vorobyev2003
View all bibliographic details
Categories: Englisch = English
Keywords: Farbsehen = Color Vision, Netzhaut = Retina, Schildkröten = Turtles, Sehvermögen = Visual Perception, Vögel = Birds
Creators: Vorobyev
Collection: Proceedings of the Royal Society of London - Biological Sciences
Views: 5/991
Views index: %
Popularity index: 0.5%
Abstract
The eyes of most diurnal reptiles and birds contain coloured retinal filters--oil droplets. Although these filters are widespread, their adaptive advantage remains uncertain. To understand why coloured oil droplets appeared and were retained during evolution, I consider both the benefits and the costs of light filtering in the retina. Oil droplets decrease cone quantum catch and reduce the overlap in sensitivity between spectrally adjacent cones. The reduction of spectral overlap increases the volume occupied by object colours in a cone space, whereas the decrease in quantum catch increases noise, and thus reduces the discriminability of similar colours. The trade-off between these two effects determines the total benefit of oil droplets. Calculations show that coloured oil droplets increase the number of object colours that can be discriminated, and thus are beneficial for colour vision. Schlüsselwörter Colour Vision, Oil Droplets, Evolution, Birds, Reptiles
Added by: Sarina  Last edited by: Sarina
wikindx 6.1.0 ©2003-2020 | Total resources: 1366 | Username: -- | Bibliography: WIKINDX Master Bibliography | Style: American Psychological Association (APA) | Database queries: 50 | DB execution: 0.04025 secs | Script execution: 0.09064 secs