Yeah they might not see the " Red " color but there is going to be a change in pigment from the light source to the ground and they like to hunt and chase small moving targets.
I understand your cynicism because of the following. The human brain uses light signals detected by the retina's cone photoreceptors as the building blocks for color perception. Three types of cone photoreceptors detect light over a range of wavelengths. The brain mixes and categorizes these signals to perceive color in a process that is not well understood.
Theory: The predator is a long lost species of snake that evolved before the human race advanced and left earth hundreads of thousands of years ago to come back later and conquer it (This isn't actually serious)
That was fascinating! I've often wondered what kind of visions do animals really see through their lens and it was even more intriguing to learn that different animals see different shades of colour compared to humans. I have a cat so it was wonderful to know how their vision works but also gives me a better insight and understanding how they cope with their daily routine. Thank you for sharing.
Moths and butterfly's have amazing hearing and vision. The structure of both appendages are amazing. Science has made uses of these structures. They have used it in the military and it's in civilian use also. Computer science has propelled (science) as a whole, a million fold.
you when your trapped in a dark room because your brother locked you in there for pranking and you cant find the door your cat is also in the room: wht does that hooman mean its perfectly light the light is on stupd hooman! edit:thanks for 12 likes
@@retardbuster1498 you can kill with your hand too..but you need to close in distance between a fly and your palm by atmost 14cm..but dont try to act while the fly is not moving..he is probably sensing you as danger. When the fly lose interest in you and starts doing its own business..like wiping its feet..you sweep your palm fast.
Actually, they only go to brightly coloured flowers because the brightly coloured flowers only has the nectar for bees but also butterflys. The dark coloured flowers has no nectar. BOOM IM THE SMARTEST KID IN THE WORLD
I wonder how weird our vision actually is. We are just so used to the way we see the world. I wonder what it really looks like from another perspective your whole life. Idk haha
Sometimes I wonder how other high intelligent animals like elephants, chimps and dolphins see us tbh. These animals are conscious of themselves and so they gotta be conscious of our existence. Apparently elephants kind of despise us and they attack people in countries where illegal ivory hunting occurs
"COWS CAN SEE THE WHOLE WORLD WITHOUT EVEN TURNING THIER HEADS"Oh soo that is how some cows kick people behind their tails? Edit:THANKS SO MUCH FOR THE LIKES EEEKKK
Personally I'm more fascinated with the way cats see the world over dogs. There are countless videos covering how dogs see. But I find this video very fascinating in this sense that it explains how fish and shark vision works. So drop the focus on dogs, and promote the rest of the animal kingdom.
@@balenciagayavo1332 Right, no hate on dogs, they're great but felines are the most efficient predators on land due to their vision, they can hear almost an octave higher than canines, and they have amazing speed, flexibility and agility. And they're definitely not subservient animals.
So cats and fish always has night vision in they're eye? Edit: thanks guys for 78 likes it was my first time havings lots of likes 😄👍 Edit 2: 84 likes?! Thank you so much!!! Edit 3: 0-0 look at those likes
Man ( out of water ): I can see anything clearly. Fish ( out of water ): It's Dark. I can't see anything and i can't breathe. Man ( in the water ): I can't open my eyes in water. It's Dark... Fish ( in the water ): I can see anything clearly... WOW... 🐟
@@retardbuster1498 what about cats eyes? And humans eyes only know to see in colors nothing else which is very boring but having the ability to change it could be very cool
I heard Mantis shrimp eyes have between 12 to 16 types of photoreceptor cells in it (humans have only three)- this means that they can see from 12 to 16 different colors then we can see only three of them(red green and blue)
I do believe this is somewhat close but logically seems impossible to see through anyone’s eyes , I even believe humans might have a slight difference in coloration
Well yes and no but we can pretty well think that everyone is seeing the same colors, because the same cells in eyes of same species catch the same light. Sooo no, its pretty accurate
They can tell by dissecting the eyes, we have rods that pick up the colours and the more of the rods for each of the 3 primary colours indicates how much Of the spectrum that eye can distinguish, after that it's guesswork, but they do have a real good idea about the colours. I researched it out of curiosity, I heard the myth that dogs see in black and white and can't see I'm two dimensions and I've always had dogs, some watch TV and that's 2D and they seem to see well in dark so must see colours, and I found dogs have a great deal of blue rods, but not many red and green, so blues will really stand out giving the world a blue tinge for a dog
There are 3 factors here: 1: Skull geometry & muscles. This can be simulated easily. 2: The eyes themselves. The data on them is gained through disection, and if you managed to replace your own eyes with an animal's eyes (including connecting them with nerves), you'd probably get such image. Though you may need to get a few weeks of training with them. Edit: Except the insects. There is no way you could connect those to a human brain and get anything usable. 3. The video format. If you were to try to get a processed image stream from a different animal or even human and try to understand it, you would fail. In the same way you would fail to resolve a FLV file when reading it with a text editor.
3:04 Butterflies have the best eyesight Me who found a butterfly outside my garage and it tried flying away but kept flying into the wall of it: "DONT TELL LIES"
@@cindyc8179 definitely was a butterfly, was too big for a moth and we dont get very big moths where I live, and it had a lot of markings on the wings, whilst moths wings r dull.
3:15 yes indeed bees cannot distinguish pink and red I caught one bee and was examining it in my kitchen , then it suddenly bit my hand and it jumped right in the fire🤣🤣
Me: *wondering why I can’t catch A frog without it jumping* ... This video: FROGS CAN ONLY SEE WHATS MOVING. Me again: *ive been called stupid in the nicest way* 👁👄👁