Scientists give cuttlefish 3D glasses and shrimp films for vision study
There are some questions in science that can only be answered by strapping a pair of 3D glasses to an unsuspecting cuttlefish and setting it loose in an underwater movie theatre.
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Dr Trevor Wardill, who led the work at the University of Minnesota, said that given the complexities of cuttlefish vision, it was considered unlikely that the animals judged distance in the same way as humans. That process, known as stereopsis, computes distance by comparing how each eye sees objects in slightly different positions.
Wardill and his colleague, Rachael Feord at Cambridge University, realised they could test whether cuttlefish use stereopsis by getting them to wear 3D glasses and playing them some juicy 3D shrimp movies. A lot of people said it wasnt going to work, Wardill said. They said theyd rip the glasses off. They said thered be ink in the tank.
But Wardill and his co-workers found a way. In experiments at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the researchers found that careful treatment, distractions, and a copious supply of shrimp were rewarded with cooperation. Youve got to get in the mind of the cuttlefish and make them happy, Wardill explained.
https://www.theguardian.com/science/2020/jan/08/scientists-play-shrimp-films-to-cuttlefish-in-3d-vision-study
There was, of course, superglue and velcro involved. Because they are Official Accessories to Weird.