What do horses see? Are they color blind? Can they see better than us in the dark?
In this video, I cover:
- The level of detail that horses can see
- Why their color vision is so different from ours
- A strange disadvantage that prevents horses from seeing what's right in front of them
- What horse eyes surprisingly have in common with ostrich eyes
This is the 8th video in a series about how different animals see the world. Check out my previous videos explaining how eagles ( • How Eagles See the Wor... ), cats ( • How Cats See the World 🐱 ), dogs ( • How Dogs See the World... ), mantis shrimp ( • How Mantis Shrimp See ... ), and other animals see the world.
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My kid's book: "Larry Laser Finds His Spark"
Follow Larry Laser on his journey to discover all the amazing things lasers are used for. From laser welding, to eye surgery, to high-speed internet, Larry learns about how he can change the world with the help of Lexi Lens.
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Sources for this video:
-The Pet Collective's KZhead video titled "Funniest Horses 🤣 | BEST Compilation of 2023": • Funniest Horses 🤣 | BE...
- Elisa Wallace Eventing's KZhead video titled "Helmet Cam: Riot Gear (2021 Area III Intermediate Horse Championships)" - • Helmet Cam: Riot Gear ...
- Ben Claremont's KZhead video titled "8 Epic Tiny Planet Effects In 60 Seconds!": • 8 Epic Tiny Planet Eff...
- BRIGHT SIDE's KZhead video titled "What Happens Inside Your Eyes - 3D Animation": • What Happens Inside Yo...
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ABOUT ME:
Here at Vision Vibes, I dive into eye-related topics ranging from understanding your lens prescription, to laser eye surgery, to the biology of your eyes. Visual, laser demos make abstract concepts much more clear and easy to understand, showing exactly how light is being focused by your eyes and corrective eyewear/contacts.
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#eye #horses #horsevision #stem #science #optometry #ophthalmology
What other animals should I cover in this series??
Mantis shrimp
I own horses and have understood that their eyes are "upside down" in that they can see the horizon very very clearly but use their whiskers and sense of smell to identify the grass they cannot see but are eating 16 hours a day with their heads down. As PREY animals that makes sense and I'm familiar with that precise distance vision as mu horses see stuff I cannot identity immediately. When my horses head goes up and his ears are focused into the distance, I pay close attention! Their eyes don't look like ours or reptiles either. We are predators as a species, they are prey as a species. It's really amazing to have develop a bond of trust and friendship with these polar opposites. Maybe a deeper dig would be in order? This is a topic worthy of more specific and amazing detail. ❤
parrots, wolves, raccoons, or foxes next please!😁
@aubs2cool4uuuu I'll look into those!
I have a video out about how mantis shrimp see!
Along with bad depth perception! Horses have trouble seeing how deep something is. It's why crossing simple puddles or holes can scare them so much, as those things can look more like bottomless pits to a horse. And to a prey animal that relies so much on their legs, they can't afford to hurt or break one
interesting! thanks for the information :)
You're welcome! 😁
Never let a horse poke their head out of the float like that. You are asking for an injury!
Timestamp?
@@Curry_Cardinal 0:23 like a trailer
I was thinking the same thing. Very dangerous
No, it is very safe and very cool to do.
I beg to differ, my horses spot wild animals in the bush from far away long before I see them.
i agree, my horse is always the one to notice animals and people before i do.
Same here, but it might be their ears they have excellent hearing
@@user-yq2rz4ls2z I used to ride at a ranch that had a family of jackrabbits that hung out around the arena, and the horse could sense the rabbits hiding in the bushes. Their sense of smell is also helpful for figuring out what’s going on.
@@user-yq2rz4ls2z i agree but mine also notices things that i would consider to be purely visual. for example noticing that a side of the dressage court got blown onto it's side even though we're five hundred feet away (probably, i'm bad at estimating distance)
They smell them
Human night vision can also take about 45 minutes to fully kick in. You can see almost immediately, but you can see best after 45 minutes.
Damn dude, I was NOT ready for that steel-wire butt-scratch. 😂
Haha yeah that one's a little jarring 😁
These horse clips are hillarious. I never knew horses could be as entertaining as cats and dogs. Now I can go to sleep knowing that I've learned something today.
I know, gathering all of those clips brought me great joy 😁
They can't see what's behind them, that's why you get kicked if you spook them from behind.
I know they can hear the feed bag from 200 yards away
Their smell and hearing are great!
All my horse can see is the ground it wants to eat when i’m trying to ride.
Priorities lol
It's telling you you probably have no idea how to lead a herd
Owls, or goats. Those rectangular irises scare me.
You got it! But I agree, those are freaky
Most owls don’t have that feature, only some species
An idea of why Bucephalus(Alexander’s the Great’s horse) may have been afraid of his shadow that made him untamable to anyone else.
I have no idea! Unfortunately the thing he was afraid of kept following him around
I was all set to watch this when I got distracted in the first 10 seconds by a very familiar set of ears! Sure enough, Elisa Wallace' Riot Gear was in the description! He's sorely missed, Rest in Peace, Rye Bread!
All due respect, you might want to check how to correctly say the word "peripheral".
So many people pronounce it wrong. Drives me crazy.
"Periphreal"
@@joycee5493joyce Your Comment is Ironically NOT Grammatically Correct!😂that would be “pronounce it wrongly”/ incorrectly! And THAT Drives me Crazy!🙈
Horses are peripheral visionaries!! ❤
I have to report, that was from steven wright.
Once my brother in law saved up his Marlboro points and got a telescope. We were on my dad's cattle ranch. He asked me to help him setup his telescope so later that evening he and my sister could look through it. I said where should I point it he said wherever you want. I pointed it way over the pasture towards the neighbors woods. They were 3 to 5 miles down the road. I looked through it and jumped back there was an eyeball filling the whole view. He looked through it and asked how I did that. He thought I was pranking him and I thought he was pranking me. He looked on the front lense and was baffled how I did it. He looked again and it blinked and he jumped back. It turns out the neighbors had horses standing in the woods and we setup the telescope zoomed in perfectly on one of there eyes. We couldn't believe it the odds of setting up a telescope perfectly focused on a horse eye miles away. This video just reminded me of it.
Wow you really found the needle in the haystack!
Even their eyeballs have horse teeth 😅
Yeah they have some freaky eyes!
Thank you for sharing & education of their vision ❤
You're welcome! I love learning how different animals' eyes work 😁
Ms with my 20/600 vision hearing him describe 20/30 as blurry. Lol. I wish. Lol.
Horses have you beat then lol
Was kind of hoping for a horse vision simulation...
I want to make a follow-up video to this diving into their specific eye anatomy more, and I'll see if I can create a horse vision simulation for that too!
Interesting, I loved all the cute horses in the video
Yeah I had a lot of fun going through those clips 😁
@@Vision-Vibes Yes, horses can be funny for sure :)
I believe that the horses retina is "ramp like" such that it can focus for close up and for in the distance. This is what is happening when they suddenly jerk their head up. What about a "look" at the octopus eye?
Oh cool. Yeah I think octopus would be a great one for this series too! I'll add them to the list 🐙
Horse eyes, like most mammal eyes also can rotate in the skull to keep the horizon level in the background. It's just very noticeable in horses because their eyes can be from 5-6ft up to less than 1ft from the ground, depending on whether the horse is looking around or grazing.
The funny horse clips was a nice touch! Great video
Thank you! I'm working on a follow-up to this with more detail on their eye anatomy, a simulation of how horses see, and more funny clips 😁
Always trust your horse- he can Smell & Hear things you cannot see
True, those senses are very strong!
0:46 made my day better 😂❤️
Yeah that's a fun clip 😀
Did anyone else find the thumbnail a bit creepy? 😅
True that eye close-up is pretty creepy!
Yes I hate it
OMG I WAS JUST WONDERING THIS TY
You're welcome! 😁
That’s fucking cool because I always wondered what my horses see and now I learned some new today thanks ❤️❤️❤️❤️👍💯💫
You're welcome! 😁
00:33 -"Periphrial"- _"Peripheral"_ There, fixed that for you.
Yeah I goofed on that one 😀
@Vision-Vibes Yeah, it's a pretty common goof, though 😇
Was hoping for a bit more depth here. Why do pupil edges seem wrinkly? What is the anatomy like?
True, here I really focused on what it is they see rather than the anatomy of their eyes. I'll do a follow-up video diving into that!
Eye curtains that act like visors in a car to block sunlight? I don't know, I just stayed at a Motel 8...
Apparently horses and other animals with horizontal bar shaped pupils aren't great at seeing vertical shapes like metal poles
The horizontal slit becomes almost vertical when the horse grazes. So, the animal, even with the head lowered to the ground, distinguishes better the vertical silhouettes of the predators moving horizontally.
@CG-rr6yx No, their eyes rotate when their head's down to graze. Many other herbivores' eyes do the same. There's a study published in Science Advances about pupil shapes that goes into it, but YT doesn't like me posting direct links
@@yetanothertroll Even our eyes rotate a bit when we tilt our heads. I wasn't aware that herbivores' eyes can rotate full 90° .
Horses could be incredibly funny and amazingly loyal.
I had no idea how funny they can be until I gathered all of the clips for this video!
Dominant mares see the best.
So... do big eyeballs let you see longer wavelengths?
It's not connected to the size of the eyeballs! The types of rods and cones (light-detecting cells) on an animals retinas determine what range of wavelengths they're sensitive to
Do I take it that - apart from size of the eye - what’s stated in this v. informative video applies to donkeys also ?
Their vision is pretty similar, but donkeys actually have a wider field of view than horses! Donkeys can see their hind feet when they're looking forward
Important question. How exactly do you get this information? How do you know what they see?
A lot of tests and knowledge acquiring and saving
Scientists can tell how different animals see by either studying the structure of their eyes (looking for the number and layout of their rods and cones), and by doing tests like electroretinography where they sense their brain activity as they look at different visual stimuli
So horses can pick up light and movement for up 10 miles in the distance because their binocular vision is incredibly
what about elephant eyes? aren’t those bigger than horse eyes?
Elephant eyes are actually smaller than horse eyes even though elephants are bigger animals! Elephant eyes are about 1.5 inches in diameter on average while horse eyes are about 2 inches in diameter on average
Horses are crazy 🤪
You got that right!
Great work! I hope you grow.
Thanks a lot! You can tell people you were here early once the channel blows up 😁
Is that why some trainers keep the horses eyes covered when they take him out of the barn so the eyes don't have to adjust
Exactly!
You should cover frogs!
On it, I'll do frogs in the next one of these! 😁
@@Vision-Vibes Thanks! Their such interesting creatures!
me wearing glasses that almost blind
You have horse vision!
@@Vision-VibesBlurred vision that still can spot predators running toward me 😂😂😂 Yah !, I believe is my closed friend "frienemy" ... I seeing one
There brain is also split. One side for the left eye. And one for the right. So they have to be taught new things twice.
Our brains and those of most other animals are similarly split too, with our left eye being connected to our brain's right hemisphere and the right eye connected to the left hemisphere
What kind of BADDIE ANIMAL would prey on a very heavy, almost amazing pereferal vision, great speed, best friends with the most dangerous animal on Earth (humans), strong legs for kicking BADDIE? WHAT KIND OF BADDIE WOULD PREY ON A HORSE?
Mountain lions, wolves, and coyotes are ballsy enough to try and hunt horses!
Cats or maybe cuttlefish
I have a video about how cats see up already, but I'll look into cuttlefish!
Did someone say 8Mother8Horse8Eyes??? I'm segmenting!!! Where's my flesh interface!?
"Flesh interface" might be one of the grossest things I've read lol
@Vision-Vibes oh man the story is absolutely horrendous. Mother Horseeyes is some crazy story that popped up on reddit over a bunch of different subs, all telling a wild story of, I don't even know how to describe it. It's almsot like some SCP stuff but on a whole different level. Has ties with the US government and CIA tests like MK Ultra, but also weird shit like flesh tunnels that go to, somewhere. If you're at all interested, Fredrick Knudsen made a great "Down the rabbit hole" video about it. It's definitely an interesting video about a quite wild story. Edit: he also has a full reading of it.
I've also read that horses can see everything below much more clearly, the higher up, the more blurred their vision is.
Horses don't have a blind spot in front of them!! 🙄 They've got a small blind spot around their nose.
That small, triangular blind spot resulting from their nose and wide-set eyes is what I'm referring to here! It extends about 3-4 feet in front of them
@@Vision-Vibes It was a bit confusing. 😄 Plenty of people believe horses can indeed not see in front of them.
40 min to adjust to sudden changes in brightness? So it would be nice if you could gradually change the light level in a barn when it's morning or night. :)
That 40 min change really just matters when taking them in and out of the barn! Because when it's day time it could be much less bright inside the barn
You put in some embarrassing video clips. If I were a horse I would be ashamed right now. I'm from Switzerland and we have mandatory military service. I chose a unit where we use horses to transport materials through the mountains where the cars don't go. I was fascinated by the eye of the horse. Perhaps you can answer my question. What are those weird things standing up in the horse eye. If I remember corerctly, it can even go across the pupil. And what purpose does it serve?
snails/slugs
Horses do not have blurry vision, just because they can’t see as far. That’s not how vision works.
"Blurry vision" here is discussed in terms of visual acuity (as in 20/30 average vision for horses vs. 20/20 for humans)
Very cool! It would be super useful if there was a series on different species of fish because it would help those of us who make hooks to design them to better target specific species.
Thanks! I've made these videos on a bunch of different animals but never about any fish, so I'll start doing some of those
@@Vision-Vibes Fishermen will love you for it!
How do they know ?
Scientists can tell how different animals see by either studying the structure of their eyes (looking for the number and layout of their rods and cones), and by doing tests like electroretinography where they sense their brain activity as they look at different visual stimuli
Horses may not see details well at a distance but it's like jurassic parks' Trex, they can spot movement in the distance really well. I would argue the great night vision part. Their dark vision seems pretty similar to our own.
Still did not see the gluegun coming
#savage
He mispronounced peripheral
Yeah I goofed on that one 😁
wtf is with the eye in the thumbnail?
Their eyes are freaky! I'm going to make another video doing a deeper dive into their specific eye anatomy
Horses are weird sometimes.
You got that right
Undulate vision 😊👍
hard to trust someone who pronounces it "perifreal"
Yeah I goofed on that one 😄
You could have went a LOT more in depth here. You basically gave surface info.
True, for these videos I have to decide how in depth to go because a lot of people just want some quick highlights, but some people like you want a deeper dive. I'm planning a follow-up to this one going into the specific anatomy of horse eyes in more detail
Why do you think is this only a 3 minute video? Of course, it wasn't the goal :D
* could have gone
@@reluctantheist5224 Congratulations on your achievement.
@@KawaiiEvoMii always glad to help
Amazing Design! All glory to YAH Almighty!
I feel that attributing any part of the natural world to any being’s design takes away from the true beauty and wonder of what nature truly is: an extremely fascinating set of intertwined systems emerging from the countless interactions of smaller systems. Part of what makes nature so amazing to me is that it is distinctly unplanned; what we see is the result of a handful of basic types of interactions occurring on an extremely large scale. It’s cooler in some ways than if someone made it that way, and no less impressive.
I personally agree with EML
@@EMLtheViewer it’s not unplanned at all. It’s all preprogrammed in their DNA. How do you think we go from a banana to humans, in terms of the language of DNA?
@@Vision-Vibes how do you think we gain new information in the form of DNA that allows us to “evolve”?
Attributing impossible assumptions and accidents to an ALMIGHTY CREATOR’s super-intelligent design takes away from the complexity and completion of nature and everything in it. Every part of it is irreducibly complex.
Paint yourself red and you can steal all the hay in a horse's box, it wont see you
Sneaky. Good chance it'll smell you though
peripheral, not periphrial... vision
I know, I goofed on that one 😄
The iris dilate not pupil.
The pupil is just the opening in the iris, so saying that the "iris dilates" or "pupil dilates" is really saying the same thing
@@Vision-Vibes a hole does not dilate, what is around does.
@@KevinAbyss "Pupil dilation is controlled by the iris dilator muscle. The dilator muscle consists of fibers that are oriented radially, and connect the exterior of the iris with the interior. When the dilator muscle contracts, it pulls the interior of the iris outward, thus increasing the size of the pupil." Mathôt S. Pupillometry: Psychology, Physiology, and Function. J Cogn. 2018 Feb 21;1(1):16. doi: 10.5334/joc.18. PMID: 31517190; PMCID: PMC6634360.
All of Kevin’s teachers agreed that he was Not a Bright Pupil!🙈
@@shanebailey9128 Fact lol