Licht-im-Terrarium: Literaturdatenbank

WIKINDX Resources

Kelber, A., & Roth, L. S. V. (2006). Nocturnal colour vision textendash not as rare as we might think. Journal of Experimental Biology, 209(5), 781–788. 
Added by: Sarina (2016-02-02 10:14:38)   
Resource type: Journal Article
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.02060
ID no. (ISBN etc.): 0022-0949
BibTeX citation key: Kelber2006a
View all bibliographic details
Categories: Englisch = English
Creators: Kelber, Roth
Collection: Journal of Experimental Biology
Views: 2/673
Views index: %
Popularity index: 0.5%
Abstract
The dual retina of humans and most vertebrates consists of multiple types of cone for colour vision in bright light and one single type of rod, leaving these animals colour-blind at night. Instead of comparing the signals from different spectral types of photoreceptors, they use one highly sensitive receptor, thus improving the signal-to-noise ratio. However, nocturnal moths and geckos can discriminate colours at extremely dim light intensities when humans are colour-blind, by sacrificing spatial and temporal rather than spectral resolution. The advantages of colour vision are just as obvious at night as they are during the day. Colour vision is much more reliable than achromatic contrast, not only under changing light intensities, but also under the colour changes occurring during dusk and dawn. It can be expected that nocturnal animals other than moths and geckos make use of the highly reliable colour signals in dim light.
Added by: Sarina  
wikindx 6.1.0 ©2003-2020 | Total resources: 1366 | Username: -- | Bibliography: WIKINDX Master Bibliography | Style: American Psychological Association (APA) | Database queries: 45 | DB execution: 0.06448 secs | Script execution: 0.11773 secs