Date:November 8, 2016
Source: Nagoya University
Nagoya
University research team uses new image processing tool to confirm
human visual system has evolved specifically to detect snakes.
Some
studies have suggested that the visual systems of humans and other
primates are finely tuned to identify dangerous creatures such as snakes
and spiders. This is understandable because, among our ancestors, those
who were more able to see and avoid these animals would have been more
likely to pass on their genes to the next generation. However, it has
been difficult to compare the recognition of different animals in an
unbiased way because of their different shapes, anatomical features, and
levels of camouflage.
In a study reported recently in PLOS ONE,
a pair of researchers at Nagoya University obtained strong support for
the idea that humans have heightened visual awareness of snakes. The
researchers applied an image manipulation tool and revealed that
subjects could identify snakes in much more blurry images than they
could identify other harmless animals in equivalent images.
The
tool, called Random Image Structure Evolution (RISE), was used to
create a series of 20 images of snakes, birds, cats, and fish, ranging
from completely blurred to completely clear. The pair then asked
subjects to views these images in order of increasing clarity until they
could identify the animal in the picture.
"Because
of the algorithm that it uses, RISE produces images that allow unbiased
comparison between the recognition of different animals," first author
Nobuyuki Kawai says. "In the images, the animals are 'camouflaged' in a
uniform way, representing typical conditions in which animals are
encountered in the wild.”
The
snakes were increasingly well-identified in the sixth to eighth of 20
images, while the subjects often needed to see the less blurred ninth or
tenth images to identity the other animals. "This suggests that humans
are primed to pick out snakes even in dense undergrowth, in a way that
isn't activated for other animals that aren't a threat," co-author
Hongshen He explains.
The
findings confirm the Snake Detection Theory; namely, that the visual
system of humans and primates has specifically evolved in a way that
facilitates picking out of dangerous animals. This work augments
understanding of the evolutionary pressures placed on our ancestors.
Story Source:
Materials provided by Nagoya University. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.
/story_source
Journal Reference:
1 Nobuyuki Kawai, Hongshen He. Breaking Snake Camouflage: Humans Detect Snakes More Accurately than Other Animals under Less Discernible Visual Conditions. PLOS ONE, 2016; 11 (10): e0164342 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0164342
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