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Apostatic selection by humans searching for computer-generated images on a colour monitor
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  • Original Article
  • Published: 01 June 1988

Apostatic selection by humans searching for computer-generated images on a colour monitor

  • G M Tucker1 nAff2 &
  • J A Allen1 

Heredity volume 60, pages 329–334 (1988)Cite this article

  • 680 Accesses

  • 11 Citations

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Abstract

A computer program was used to generate “populations” of dimorphic “prey” on the screen of a colour monitor. Different subjects were presented with the prey at seven different frequencies and were asked to use a light pen to remove each prey they detected. They all received the same two types of prey but 70 had them presented against a matching background and 49 had them against a background that made them conspicuous. The results showed that apostatic selection occurred when the prey were inconspicuous but not when they were conspicuous. There is evidence that the apostatic selection was caused by some effect of the difficulty in detecting the prey when they were cryptic.

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Author information

Author notes
  1. G M Tucker

    Present address: British Trust for Ornithology, Beech Grove, Tring, Herts, HP23 5NR

Authors and Affiliations

  1. Department of Biology, University of Southampton, Southampton, SO9 3TU, UK

    G M Tucker & J A Allen

Authors
  1. G M Tucker
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  2. J A Allen
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Cite this article

Tucker, G., Allen, J. Apostatic selection by humans searching for computer-generated images on a colour monitor. Heredity 60, 329–334 (1988). https://doi.org/10.1038/hdy.1988.50

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  • Received: 07 July 1987

  • Issue date: 01 June 1988

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/hdy.1988.50

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This article is cited by

  • Frequency-dependent selection with background heterogeneity

    • L M Cook
    • G Kenyon

    Heredity (1991)

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