Licht-im-Terrarium: Literaturdatenbank

WIKINDX Resources

Jacobs, G. H. (2008). Primate color vision: A comparative perspective. Visual Neuroscience, 25(5-6), 619–633. 
Added by: Sarina (2016-02-03 09:28:42)   
Resource type: Journal Article
DOI: 10.1017/S0952523808080760
ID no. (ISBN etc.): 1469-8714
BibTeX citation key: Jacobs2008
View all bibliographic details
Categories: Englisch = English
Creators: Jacobs
Collection: Visual Neuroscience
Views: 3/725
Views index: %
Popularity index: 0.5%
Abstract
ABSTRACT Thirty years ago virtually everything known about primate color vision derived from psychophysical studies of normal and color-defective humans and from physiological investigations of the visual system of the macaque monkey, the most popular of human surrogates for this purpose. The years since have witnessed much progress toward the goal of understanding this remarkable feature of primate vision. Among many advances, investigations focused on naturally occurring variations in color vision in a wide range of nonhuman primate species have proven to be particularly valuable. Results from such studies have been central to our expanding understanding of the interrelationships between opsin genes, cone photopigments, neural organization, and color vision. This work is also yielding valuable insights into the evolution of color vision.
Added by: Sarina  
wikindx 6.1.0 ©2003-2020 | Total resources: 1366 | Username: -- | Bibliography: WIKINDX Master Bibliography | Style: American Psychological Association (APA) | Database queries: 44 | DB execution: 0.04081 secs | Script execution: 0.10744 secs