Roger Hanlon approaches the study of visual systems from a different direction than Hecht, Wald, and Hartline. Hanlon’s work is ethological; he studies animal behavior, especially behavior related to vision and camouflage. Camouflage is an explicitly visual way in which animals hide themselves from each other, whether they’re predators or prey. Good camouflage makes prey harder to catch and eat, and makes predators harder to avoid.
Note: There is no science without a scientist, and so the author has attempted to maintain the essential truth of that—namely that at each stage of the scientific process there is a person looking at evidence and making judgments. However there is almost no personal biography, and much of the professional biography of each author has been abridged dramatically. In spite of this, the reader should keep in mind that each of these individuals were complicated people who share at least a job description. George Wald once said, “A scientist should be the happiest of men. Not that science isn't serious; but as everyone knows, being serious is one way of being happy, just as being gay is one way of being unhappy”. Each of these individuals had a scientific ethic, as well as a body of scientific work, and where possible, the author of each section has attempted to not forget the romanticism of the spirit of investigation, or the fact that many of these people were excited by a simple truth—after all, they were seeing things no one else had seen before. That majesty can be easy to forget if you are an outsider new to the complexities of visual physiology, but these scientists never forgot it.
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Roger Hanlon, Universal Camouflage, and Studying Vision at the MBL in the 21st Century
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