Vision is comprised of several elements:
- field of view
- depth perception
- acuity
- perception of motion, and
- color differentiation,
all of which are integrated in the brain to produce
useful vision.
Field of view
Pets’ eyes are set wide on their heads, so their field of view is 60-70°
larger than the human field (humans see 180°, while pets can see closer to
240°). Although humans can see objects 3 inches from their noses, pets
generally can’t see objects any closer than 1 or 2 feet from their noses --
they use their noses and whiskers to identify close objects.
Depth perception
The central, binocular field of vision of pets -- the vision field seen
simultaneously by both eyes -- is less than half that of humans, so pets
have very limited depth perception and are therefore less able to accurately
judge distances.
Acuity
Acuity is the ability to focus and clearness of vision, measured in people
using an eye chart and in animals using retinoscopy. Humans have about 1.2
million optic nerve fibers; dogs and cats only have about 150,000 optic
nerve fibers, so their ability to see detail is only approximately 20-40%
that of humans.
Tests suggest that dogs' visual acuity may be somewhere
between 20/60 and 20/80. This means that your pet can distinguish an object
at 20 feet away that you could see at 60 or 80 feet.
However, pets have better vision in dim light than we do. Cats can see with
about 85% less light than humans need. Your pet’s pupil acts like an
aperture for a camera and can dilate to allow superior light capture.
Pets have a layer of tissue in the eye called a tapetum lucidum which lies
immediately behind or sometimes within the retina. It reflects visible light
back through the retina, increasing the light available to the
photoreceptors. This improves vision in low-light conditions, but can
cause the perceived image to be blurry from the interference of the
reflected light. You can see evidence of the tapetum lucidum by shining a
light such as a flashlight into your pet’s eyes -- the pupil appears to
glow.
Moving objects
Pets see movement much better than we do. In fact they see movement so well
that they may see flickering images on television rather than the continuous
image that we can see.
Color differentiation
Dogs and cats have a limited ability to see colors. Although they can see
differentiate between some colors (primarily blue and yellow), the colors
appear to be pale or faded. It is difficult for most pets to distinguish
between orange, yellow and red objects based on color.