Published June 22, 2006 | Version public
Journal Article

Bare skin, blood and the evolution of primate colour vision

  • 1. ROR icon California Institute of Technology

Abstract

We investigate the hypothesis that colour vision in primates was selected for discriminating the spectral modulations on the skin of conspecifics, presumably for the purpose of discriminating emotional states, socio-sexual signals and threat displays. Here we show that, consistent with this hypothesis, there are two dimensions of skin spectral modulations, and trichromats but not dichromats are sensitive to each. Furthermore, the M and L cone maximum sensitivities for routine trichromats are optimized for discriminating variations in blood oxygen saturation, one of the two blood-related dimensions determining skin reflectance. We also show that, consistent with the hypothesis, trichromat primates tend to be bare faced.

Additional Information

© 2006 The Royal Society. Received 5 December 2005. Accepted 3 January 2006. We wish to thank two helpful referees for their comments. Support for this research was given by 5F32EY015370-02, NIH (to M.A.C) and JST.ERATO, Japan (to S.S.).

Additional details

Identifiers

PMCID
PMC1618887
Eprint ID
105645
Resolver ID
CaltechAUTHORS:20200929-143506853

Funding

NIH Postdoctoral Fellowship
5F32EY015370-02
Japan Science and Technology Agency

Dates

Created
2020-09-30
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Updated
2021-11-16
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