Human colour vision perception may have developed very rapidly after an evolutionary mutation, new research suggests.
Human colour vision perception may have developed very rapidly after an evolutionary mutation, new research suggests.
Mice, which have just two types of colour photoreceptor, have been bred with a third. These mice responded instantly in colour perception tests.
This ability to immediately respond to an inherited facility has led researchers at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, to comment that our ancestors 'did not require additional generations to evolve new sight.'
Register now to continue reading
Thank you for visiting Optician Online. Register now to access up to 10 news and opinion articles a month.
Register
Already have an account? Sign in here