Experimental evidence that primate trichromacy is well suited for detecting primate social colour signals
- PMID: 28615496
- PMCID: PMC5474062
- DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2016.2458
Experimental evidence that primate trichromacy is well suited for detecting primate social colour signals
Abstract
Primate trichromatic colour vision has been hypothesized to be well tuned for detecting variation in facial coloration, which could be due to selection on either signal wavelengths or the sensitivities of the photoreceptors themselves. We provide one of the first empirical tests of this idea by asking whether, when compared with other visual systems, the information obtained through primate trichromatic vision confers an improved ability to detect the changes in facial colour that female macaque monkeys exhibit when they are proceptive. We presented pairs of digital images of faces of the same monkey to human observers and asked them to select the proceptive face. We tested images that simulated what would be seen by common catarrhine trichromatic vision, two additional trichromatic conditions and three dichromatic conditions. Performance under conditions of common catarrhine trichromacy, and trichromacy with narrowly separated LM cone pigments (common in female platyrrhines), was better than for evenly spaced trichromacy or for any of the dichromatic conditions. These results suggest that primate trichromatic colour vision confers excellent ability to detect meaningful variation in primate face colour. This is consistent with the hypothesis that social information detection has acted on either primate signal spectral reflectance or photoreceptor spectral tuning, or both.
Keywords: colour vision; face colour variation; primate; reproductive state; social signal; trichromacy.
© 2017 The Authors.
Conflict of interest statement
We have no competing interests. The content of the manuscript is solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of National Centre for Research Resources (NCRR) or NIH.
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