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      Cuttlefish see shape from shading, fine-tuning coloration in response to pictorial depth cues and directional illumination

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          Abstract

          Humans use shading as a cue to three-dimensional form by combining low-level information about light intensity with high-level knowledge about objects and the environment. Here, we examine how cuttlefish Sepia officinalis respond to light and shadow to shade the white square (WS) feature in their body pattern. Cuttlefish display the WS in the presence of pebble-like objects, and they can shade it to render the appearance of surface curvature to a human observer, which might benefit camouflage. Here we test how they colour the WS on visual backgrounds containing two-dimensional circular stimuli, some of which were shaded to suggest surface curvature, whereas others were uniformly coloured or divided into dark and light semicircles. WS shading, measured by lateral asymmetry, was greatest when the animal rested on a background of shaded circles and three-dimensional hemispheres, and less on plain white circles or black/white semicircles. In addition, shading was enhanced when light fell from the lighter side of the shaded stimulus, as expected for real convex surfaces. Thus, the cuttlefish acts as if it perceives surface curvature from shading, and takes account of the direction of illumination. However, the direction of WS shading is insensitive to the directions of background shading and illumination; instead the cuttlefish tend to turn to face the light source.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Proc Biol Sci
          Proc. Biol. Sci
          RSPB
          royprsb
          Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
          The Royal Society
          0962-8452
          1471-2954
          16 March 2016
          : 283
          : 1826
          : 20160062
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Faculty of Biological Sciences, University of Leeds , Leeds LS2 9JT, UK
          [2 ] School of Biological Sciences, University of Sussex , Brighton BN1 9QG, UK
          [3 ] Department of Biology, Duke University , Durham, NC 27708, USA
          Author notes
          Article
          PMC4810872 PMC4810872 4810872 rspb20160062
          10.1098/rspb.2016.0062
          4810872
          26984626
          21289886-b667-42a9-8207-adb0f7cf4cf6
          © 2016 The Author(s)

          Published by the Royal Society. All rights reserved.

          History
          : 12 January 2016
          : 16 February 2016
          Funding
          Funded by: Office of Naval Research, http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100000006;
          Award ID: N00014-09-1-1053
          Categories
          1001
          14
          60
          133
          Research Articles
          Custom metadata
          March 16, 2016

          visual cognition,cephalopod,visual depth,animal vision,visual ecology

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