Frank Brown Cloud

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Thoen study

  • On attempts to see the world through other eyes.

    Recoloring an image is cool … but is it enough to imagine how other animals view a certain scene?

    September 21, 2015

    Frank Brown Cloud

    All posts, Evolutionary biology, Medicine, Psychology
    A Different Form of Color Vision in Mantis Shrimp, animal cognition, animal vision, animal vision tool, attention, brain plasticity, color vision, colorblind glasses, cone cells, crotalomorphism, dichromat, distinguishing between similar colors, eyes, facial recognition, frequency shifting, fusiform gyrus, gene therapy, glasses to let colorblind people see color, human facial recognition, image processing, mantis shrimp, mantis shrimp research, mantis shrimp vision, neurological processing, New York Times, peacock vision, perception, photoreceptors, retrovirus, species, starling vision, summer of science, tetrachromat, Thoen study, trichromat, vision, visual spectrum, what do bees see, what do dogs see, what does the world look like to other animals, what does the world look like to other creatures
    On attempts to see the world through other eyes.

Frank Brown Cloud

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