Innes C. Cuthill mainly investigates Ecology, Plumage, Zoology, Mate choice and MEDLINE. His research integrates issues of Sexual selection, Feather, Communication and Color vision in his study of Plumage. As part of one scientific family, Innes C. Cuthill deals mainly with the area of Zoology, narrowing it down to issues related to the Parus caeruleus, and often Reflectivity.
His Mate choice research is multidisciplinary, incorporating perspectives in Evolutionary biology, Reproductive success, Ultraviolet and Zebra. The concepts of his MEDLINE study are interwoven with issues in Quality, Research design and Clinical trial. The study incorporates disciplines such as Animal testing and Guideline in addition to Checklist.
Innes C. Cuthill mostly deals with Ecology, Zoology, Camouflage, Artificial intelligence and Predation. His work in Ecology addresses subjects such as Paternal care, which are connected to disciplines such as Brood. His studies deal with areas such as Ultraviolet and Aposematism as well as Zoology.
Innes C. Cuthill combines subjects such as Crypsis, Countershading, Visual search and Perception with his study of Camouflage. His Artificial intelligence research focuses on Computer vision and how it relates to Visual perception. Innes C. Cuthill frequently studies issues relating to Sexual selection and Mate choice.
His scientific interests lie mostly in Camouflage, Artificial intelligence, Computer vision, Ecology and Predation. His Camouflage research includes themes of Crypsis, Countershading, Perception, Visual search and Aposematism. The Aposematism study combines topics in areas such as Zoology and Spatial frequency.
His study looks at the intersection of Computer vision and topics like Visual perception with Animal coloration. He regularly links together related areas like Obesity in his Ecology studies. His Predation research is multidisciplinary, incorporating elements of Giraffa camelopardalis, Luminance and Salience.
Camouflage, Artificial intelligence, Countershading, Computer vision and Perception are his primary areas of study. His Camouflage research is within the category of Ecology. His primary area of study in Ecology is in the field of Predation.
In his work, Luminance, Feature and Cognitive neuroscience of visual object recognition is strongly intertwined with Pattern recognition, which is a subfield of Artificial intelligence. Orientation and Cognitive psychology is closely connected to Object in his research, which is encompassed under the umbrella topic of Perception. As a part of the same scientific study, Innes C. Cuthill usually deals with the Aposematism, concentrating on Zoology and frequently concerns with Predator and Biological Mimicry.
This overview was generated by a machine learning system which analysed the scientist’s body of work. If you have any feedback, you can contact us here.
Improving Bioscience Research Reporting: The ARRIVE Guidelines for Reporting Animal Research
Carol Kilkenny;William J Browne;Innes C Cuthill;Michael Emerson;Michael Emerson.
PLOS Biology (2010)
Effect size, confidence interval and statistical significance: a practical guide for biologists.
Shinichi Nakagawa;Innes C. Cuthill.
Biological Reviews (2007)
Animal research: reporting in vivo experiments: the ARRIVE guidelines
Carol Kilkenny;William Browne;Innes C Cuthill;Michael Emerson.
British Journal of Pharmacology (2010)
The ecological costs of avian fat storage
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Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B (1993)
Tetrachromacy, oil droplets and bird plumage colours
M Vorobyev;D Osorio;Atd Bennett;NJ Marshall.
Journal of Comparative Physiology A-neuroethology Sensory Neural and Behavioral Physiology (1998)
Survey of the quality of experimental design, statistical analysis and reporting of research using animals.
Carol Kilkenny;Nicholas R. Parsons;Ed Kadyszewski;Michael F. W. Festing.
PLOS ONE (2009)
Using digital photography to study animal coloration
Martin Stevens;C. Alejandro Párraga;Innes C. Cuthill;Julian C. Partridge.
Biological Journal of The Linnean Society (2007)
Disruptive coloration and background pattern matching.
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Nature (2005)
Ultraviolet Vision in Birds: What Is Its Function?
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Vision Research (1994)
Ultraviolet Vision in Birds
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Advances in The Study of Behavior (2000)
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