Tuesday, 5 July 2016

Study proposes explanation for how cephalopods see color, despite black and white vision

Study proposes explanation for how cephalopods see color, despite black and white vision

For years, camera-makers have sought ways to avoid chromatic aberration—the color fringes that occur when various wavelengths of light focus at different distances behind a lens. But where photographers see a problem, some sea creatures see possibility. A new study, co-authored by the father-and-son team of Christopher and Alexander Stubbs, suggests that chromatic aberration may explain how cephalopods—the class of animals that includes...

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