Scientists Confirm Dogs See 2 Colors, Not Black and White
Updated
Updated · spacedaily.com · Jul 14
Scientists Confirm Dogs See 2 Colors, Not Black and White
3 articles · Updated · spacedaily.com · Jul 14
Summary
Dogs perceive color through two cone types, seeing blues and yellows while reds and greens fade into browns and grays rather than a black-and-white world.
Two retinal cones—compared with three in most humans—let dogs distinguish blue from yellow but sharply limit red-green separation, making their vision broadly similar to human red-green colorblindness.
That means a red toy on green grass can blend together for a dog, which often relies more on brightness differences; blue or yellow toys stand out more clearly.
The finding overturns a long-running popular myth and reflects decades of eye and behavior studies that mapped how dogs' simpler visual system actually works.