Colour preferences and colour vision in poultry chicks

被引:59
作者
Ham, A. D. [1 ]
Osorio, D. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Sussex, Sch Life Sci, Brighton BN1 9QG, E Sussex, England
关键词
colour; vision; behaviour; Gallus gallus; chicks; NATURAL PREFERENCES; RECEPTOR NOISE; CATEGORIZATION; RESPONSES; DISCRIMINATION; PERCEPTION; AVOIDANCE; PATTERNS; CONTRAST; OBJECTS;
D O I
10.1098/rspb.2007.0538
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
The dramatic colours of biological communication signals raise questions about how animals perceive suprathreshold colour differences, and there are long-standing questions about colour preferences and colour categorization by non-human species. This study investigates preferences of foraging poultry chicks (Gallus gallus) as they peck at coloured objects. Work on colour recognition often deals with responses to monochromatic lights and how animals divide the spectrum. We used complementary colours, where the intermediate is grey, and related the chicks' choices to three models of the factors that may affect the attractiveness. Two models assume that attractiveness is determined by a metric based on the colour discrimination threshold either (i) by chromatic contrast against the background or (ii) relative to an internal standard. An alternative third model is that categorization is important. We tested newly hatched and 9-day-old chicks with four pairs of ( avian) complementary colours, which were orange, blue, red and green for humans. Chromatic contrast was more relevant to newly hatched chicks than to 9-day-old birds, but in neither case could contrast alone account for preferences; especially for orange over blue. For older chicks, there is evidence for categorization of complementary colours, with a boundary at grey.
引用
收藏
页码:1941 / 1948
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Colour preferences according to educational background
    Hanafy, Ihab Mahmoud
    Sanad, Reham
    6TH WORLD CONFERENCE ON PSYCHOLOGY, COUNSELING AND GUIDANCE (WCPCG-2015), 2015, 205 : 437 - 444
  • [32] Fish use colour to learn compound visual signals
    Newport, Cait
    Green, Naomi F.
    McClure, Eva C.
    Osorio, Daniel C.
    Vorobyev, Misha
    Marshall, N. Justin
    Cheney, Karen L.
    ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR, 2017, 125 : 93 - 100
  • [33] Unilateral colour vision defects and the dimensions of dichromat experience
    Broackes, Justin
    OPHTHALMIC AND PHYSIOLOGICAL OPTICS, 2010, 30 (05) : 672 - 684
  • [34] Contrast normalization in colour vision: the effect of luminance contrast on colour contrast detection
    Mullen, Kathy T.
    Kim, Yeon Jin
    Gheiratmand, Mina
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2014, 4
  • [35] Colour preference and colour vision of the larvae of the giant freshwater prawn Macrobrachium rosenbergii
    Kawamura, Gunzo
    Bagarinao, Teodora
    Yong, Annita Seok Kian
    Jeganathan, Ivy Michelle Xavier
    Lim, Leong-Seng
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MARINE BIOLOGY AND ECOLOGY, 2016, 474 : 67 - 72
  • [36] Bare skin, blood and the evolution of primate colour vision
    Changizi, Mark A.
    Zhang, Qiong
    Shimojo, Shinsuke
    BIOLOGY LETTERS, 2006, 2 (02) : 217 - 221
  • [37] Diagnosis of colour vision deficits using eye movements
    Taore, Aryaman
    Lobo, Gabriel
    Turnbull, Philip R.
    Dakin, Steven C.
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2022, 12 (01)
  • [38] Behavioural evidence for colour vision in an elasmobranch
    Van-Eyk, Sarah M.
    Siebeck, Ulrike E.
    Champ, Connor M.
    Marshall, Justin
    Hart, Nathan S.
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY, 2011, 214 (24) : 4186 - 4192
  • [39] The Implication of Vision and Colour in Cultural Heritage
    Bernardez-Vilaboa, Ricardo
    HERITAGE, 2020, 3 (04) : 1063 - 1068
  • [40] The nature of sound and vision in relation to colour
    Greated, Marianne
    OPTICS AND LASER TECHNOLOGY, 2011, 43 (02) : 337 - 347