Dog Vision - See What They See!

This is a rough simulation I rendered through the eyes of a dog. A dog's eyesight is very limited to color in respect to what we see; they can see (a lighter shade of) blue and yellow, but cannot distinguish red and green. They also have a visual acuity (contrast) of much less detail than we do. It is believed that most dogs have an eyesight equivalent from 20/50 to 20/75, however they have been known to identify their owner at a range of 800-900 meters due to their ability to visually discriminate motion (impressive)! BTW, this is my Labrador. His name is Wilbur! --------------------------------- Dog Vision filter details: (Photoshop CS5 - rendering frames from original video) Channel Mixer values Output Channel: Red R= +32% G= +85% B= -17% Output Channel: Green R= +25% G= +68% B= +7% Output Channel: Blue R= -1% G= +1% B= +100% --------------------------------- (PowerDirector v12) Visual acuity filter simulated through a configuration degree of “4“ in the “Blur“ effect filter. Brightness effect reduced by a factor of 20% (this, however, does not account for lighter color tones, since there is a relative measure of brightness-detection with dogs due to their tapetum lucidum [a layer of tissue in the back of the eye which reflects visible light]). (Video to Picture Image Converter) Extract still frames from original video footage (.mts) from my Panasonic Lumix TS4. (Photo Lapse 3) Convert the edited images back to high-quality .avi format For some reason, the recompiled video was slower, so I had to modify the length of the edited video to match the original. Thank you for watching! As time progresses, so will my videos. Enjoy! dichromacy color blind dogs red green blue yellow dog dogs eyesight eye vision see sees dogvision black white myth real actual accurate video footage simulation presentation