Short-Wavelength Pigment: Seeing the World in Color
Short-Wavelength Pigment: The Foundation of Scotopic and Color Vision The Core Definition and Mechanism of Short-Wavelength Pigment (SWP) The Short-Wavelength Pigment (SWP) is a specialized class of visual pigment, formally known as opsins, essential for the process of visual transduction across a wide spectrum of animal life, including humans, birds, fish, and reptiles. At its […]
Visual Perception: The Science of Seeing in the Dark
TAPETUM: A Review of its Biological, Evolutionary and Physiological Significance Kanika Sharma, Neha Singh Abstract The tapetum lucidum is a specialized layer of tissue found in the eyes of some animals, including cats, dogs, and horses. It is responsible for the production of a reflective layer of light that increases the night vision of these […]
DICHROMATISM
Introduction to the Phenomenon of Dichromatism In the expansive field of sensory biology and comparative psychology, dichromatism represents a specialized visual phenomenon where the two eyes of an individual organism perceive the same external color stimulus as distinct or different colors. Unlike the more common term “dichromacy,” which refers to the possession of only two […]