How Animals See the World: Comparative Behavior, Biology, and Evolution of Vision
Document Type
Book
Publication Date
3-14-2012
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195334654.001.0001
Abstract
The visual world of animals is highly diverse and often very different from the world that we humans take for granted. This book provides an extensive review of the latest behavioral and neurobiological research on animal vision, highlighting fascinating species similarities and differences in visual processing. It contains twenty-six chapters about a variety of species including: honeybees, spiders, fish, birds, and primates. The chapters are divided into six sections: perceptual grouping and segmentation, object perception and object recognition, motion perception, visual attention, different dimensions of visual perception, and the evolution of the visual system.
Was this content written or created while at USF?
Yes
Citation / Publisher Attribution
O. F. Lazareva, T. Shimizu & E. A. Wasserman (Eds.), How Animals See the World: Comparative Behavior, Biology, and Evolution of Vision, Oxford University Press, 560 p.
Scholar Commons Citation
Lazareva, Olesya; Shimizu, Toru; and Wasserman, Edward A., "How Animals See the World: Comparative Behavior, Biology, and Evolution of Vision" (2012). Psychology Faculty Publications. 480.
https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/psy_facpub/480