Camouflage, such as the patterns on large cats like leopards, is nature’s form of disguise, enabling animals to blend in with surroundings. But how did this camouflage develop, why is some more detailed than others, and why do some cats such as tigers have stripes, while others such as leopards have rosette patterning? ‘We wanted to tackle the problem of cat coloration and explain it at different levels,’ Will Allen says of new research he has conducted as a graduate student at the University of Bristol. Allen is doing his PhD in Psychology, in vision science, and so is interested in the camouflage and coloration as visual signals. ‘Vision Science is especially relevant to stuff like camouflage,’ says Allen. ‘It’s interdisciplinary,’ says Allen, so the Bristol Vision Institute at the University is comprised of, ‘psychologists, biologists, and also engineers and computer scientists who all tackle the problem of vision and visual behaviours from their unique perspective.’
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