No
2007-03-13 23:47:35
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Animals process visual information in distinct ways, largely a direct result of the specifics of their visual equipment. An animal's eyel and the arrangement of its various structures determine the basis of its visual world. Although all vertebrates utilize an eye that takes in images by focusing on an object in a camera-like manner, many have different eye shapes, and some do not possess all of the same structures (such as cones, which distinguish colors). Of course, some animals have receptors that pick up visual stimuli that humans cannot perceive; birds, for example, can see ultraviolet light, and as a result observe a variety of visual patterns which humans can only view through the use of additional external filters.
Basic visual capabilities are not all that matter when considering animal vision. Though the raw information is important in that it provides a basis for any further brain processing, once a picture is formed it moves on to the rest of the brain and is compiled with all the other sensory information that an animal has taken in. The end product is a perceived view of the surrounding world, otherwise known as an ümvelt.
2007-03-14 06:56:32
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answer #2
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answered by Ratheesh vL 2
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Not all animals. But some animals distinguish the colors
2007-03-14 07:13:06
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answer #3
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answered by jayashri g 1
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I think it depends also on wich animal are you talking about... even some humans are completely color blind :)
2007-03-14 06:37:30
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answer #4
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answered by Lorenzo 3
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yes,definitely they can,if not how can a bull come back of a person who wears red.
2007-03-14 08:28:59
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answer #5
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answered by majji s 1
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They might
2007-03-14 06:32:24
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answer #6
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answered by rasu 2
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not all animals.....
2007-03-14 06:42:15
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answer #7
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answered by Dinesh 4
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