Housing Watch Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Bird vision - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bird_vision

    Vision is the most important sense for birds, since good eyesight is essential for safe flight. Birds have a number of adaptations which give visual acuity superior to that of other vertebrate groups; a pigeon has been described as "two eyes with wings". [ 1] Birds are theropod dinosaurs, [ 2][ 3] and the avian eye resembles that of other ...

  3. Bird's-eye view - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bird's-eye_view

    v. t. e. A bird's-eye viewis an elevated view of an object or location from a very steep viewing angle, creating a perspectiveas if the observer were a birdin flight looking downward. Bird's-eye views can be an aerial photograph, but also a drawing, and are often used in the making of blueprints, floor plans and maps. [1]

  4. Bird anatomy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bird_anatomy

    Birds have acute eyesight—raptors (birds of prey) have vision eight times sharper than humans—thanks to higher densities of photoreceptors in the retina (up to 1,000,000 per square mm in Buteos, compared to 200,000 for humans), a high number of neurons in the optic nerves, a second set of eye muscles not found in other animals, and, in some ...

  5. Field of view - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Field_of_view

    If the analogy of the eye's retina working as a sensor is drawn upon, the corresponding concept in human (and much of animal vision) is the visual field. [3] It is defined as "the number of degrees of visual angle during stable fixation of the eyes". [4] Note that eye movements are excluded in the visual field's definition.

  6. Tetrachromacy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetrachromacy

    The four pigments in a bird's cone cells (in this example, estrildid finches) extend the range of color vision into the ultraviolet. [1]Tetrachromacy (from Greek tetra, meaning "four" and chroma, meaning "color") is the condition of possessing four independent channels for conveying color information, or possessing four types of cone cell in the eye.

  7. Monocular vision - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monocular_vision

    Monocular vision impairment refers to having no vision in one eye with adequate vision in the other. [ 2] Monopsia is a medical condition in humans who cannot perceive depth even though their two eyes are medically normal, healthy, and spaced apart in a normal way. Vision that perceives three-dimensional depth requires more than parallax.

  8. Bird's-Eye View: Artist Jayson Fann's Human-Sized Bird's ...

    www.aol.com/news/on-jayson-fann-birds-nests.html

    We've heard of homes that blend right into the great outdoors and treehouse living, but this takes all of that to a whole new level.Californian artist Jayson Fann has created human-sized bird's ...

  9. Compound eye - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compound_eye

    A compound eye is a visual organ found in arthropods such as insects and crustaceans. It may consist of thousands of ommatidia, [ 1] which are tiny independent photoreception units that consist of a cornea, lens, and photoreceptor cells which distinguish brightness and color. The image perceived by this arthropod eye is a combination of inputs ...