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Box A1   Animal Vision  71

  VetBooks.ir  These abilities allow them to make use of sig-  frames  that  the  eyes  send  to  it.  The  rate  at
                                                      which these are generated influences an ani-
             nals that we cannot see. It is important to
             remember that whilst birds, insects, and
                                                      erate and process information  at 60  images
             some mammals such as rodents (Jacobs et al.   mal’s visual perception of time. Humans gen-
             1991), reindeer (Rangifer tarandus) (Hogg   per second, whereas smaller species with
             et  al. 2011), and a phyllostomid flower bat   higher metabolic rates typically process
             (Glossophaga soricina) (Winter et al. 2003),   images at a higher frequency (Healy et  al.
             can detect ultraviolet light, they do not see   2013). To them the world will appear as if in
             solely in ultraviolet. The images that they see   slow motion, whilst larger animals which pro-
             will depend on how their brain combines the   cess images at a lower rate will experience the
             information from the ultraviolet portion of   world in a manner akin to a time‐lapse
             the spectrum with that from the receptors   film  –  for them perceiving slow moving
             tuned to what we refer to as the visible spec-  objects as moving may be difficult. The
             trum. The same will be true of the butterflies   refresh rate of televisions and monitor screens
             and fish that can perceive near infrared (Land   is set to just above the human threshold for
             and Nilsson 2012).                       seeing  the individual images,  and thus we
               Animals also differ in the way that they per-  perceive motion rather than a flickering series
             ceive movement. Like colour, movement is   of images. However species with higher rates
             such a key aspect of our own visual world it is   of visual processing, such as dogs and small
             similarly hard to comprehend it is not always   animals, would see a flickering screen. This is
             seen in the same way by other species. Motion   important to remember if using a monitor
             perception is generated by the brain com-  screen as a stimulus, either for enrichment or
             paring the series of successive snapshots or   research, with other species.


               References


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               Metabolic rate and body size are linked with   and nature of color vision among
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