Kemp Darrell J, Herberstein Marie E, Fleishman Leo J, Endler John A, Bennett Andrew T D, Dyer Adrian G, Hart Nathan S, Marshall Justin, Whiting Martin J
Department of Biological Sciences, Macquarie University, North Ryde, New South Wales 2109, Australia.
Am Nat. 2015 Jun;185(6):705-24. doi: 10.1086/681021. Epub 2015 Apr 16.
The world in color presents a dazzling dimension of phenotypic variation. Biological interest in this variation has burgeoned, due to both increased means for quantifying spectral information and heightened appreciation for how animals view the world differently than humans. Effective study of color traits is challenged by how to best quantify visual perception in nonhuman species. This requires consideration of at least visual physiology but ultimately also the neural processes underlying perception. Our knowledge of color perception is founded largely on the principles gained from human psychophysics that have proven generalizable based on comparative studies in select animal models. Appreciation of these principles, their empirical foundation, and the reasonable limits to their applicability is crucial to reaching informed conclusions in color research. In this article, we seek a common intellectual basis for the study of color in nature. We first discuss the key perceptual principles, namely, retinal photoreception, sensory channels, opponent processing, color constancy, and receptor noise. We then draw on this basis to inform an analytical framework driven by the research question in relation to identifiable viewers and visual tasks of interest. Consideration of the limits to perceptual inference guides two primary decisions: first, whether a sensory-based approach is necessary and justified and, second, whether the visual task refers to perceptual distance or discriminability. We outline informed approaches in each situation and discuss key challenges for future progress, focusing particularly on how animals perceive color. Given that animal behavior serves as both the basic unit of psychophysics and the ultimate driver of color ecology/evolution, behavioral data are critical to reconciling knowledge across the schools of color research.
色彩斑斓的世界呈现出令人眼花缭乱的表型变异维度。由于量化光谱信息的手段不断增加,以及人们越来越认识到动物对世界的看法与人类不同,对这种变异的生物学兴趣迅速增长。如何最好地量化非人类物种的视觉感知给颜色性状的有效研究带来了挑战。这不仅需要考虑视觉生理学,最终还需要考虑感知背后的神经过程。我们对颜色感知的认识很大程度上基于从人类心理物理学中获得的原理,这些原理在对选定动物模型的比较研究中已被证明具有普遍性。理解这些原理、它们的实证基础以及其适用的合理限度对于在颜色研究中得出明智的结论至关重要。在本文中,我们寻求一个研究自然界颜色的共同知识基础。我们首先讨论关键的感知原理,即视网膜光感受器、感觉通道、对立加工、颜色恒常性和感受器噪声。然后,我们在此基础上构建一个分析框架,该框架由与可识别的观察者和感兴趣的视觉任务相关的研究问题驱动。对感知推理局限性的考虑指导了两个主要决策:第一,基于感觉的方法是否必要且合理;第二,视觉任务是指感知距离还是可辨别性。我们概述了每种情况下的明智方法,并讨论了未来进展面临的关键挑战,特别关注动物如何感知颜色。鉴于动物行为既是心理物理学的基本单位,也是颜色生态学/进化的最终驱动力,行为数据对于协调不同颜色研究学派的知识至关重要。