Bee vision of pattern and 3D. The Bidder Lecture 1994
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Horridge, George Adrian
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Wiley
Abstract
Insect vision is nothing if not active. The regular head
movements, called saccades, enable the fly Drosophila to
keep a straight path in flight despite inequalities in the
thrust of the wings. Using their own motion, bees in flight
measure the ranges of nearby objects. A long history of
research shows that bees discriminate visually in ways
that depend on their activity or task, so we must distinguish
between vision during flying, fixating or hovering
and landing.
Bees return again and again for a reward of sugar solution
and use their eyes to find their way. In an apparatus
that makes them discriminate between two simultaneously
visible but regularly interchanged targets, seen at a
distance of 27 cm, bees are able to distinguish a remarkable
number of simple patterns, but they fail in certain
critical cases. The results can be explained with the
hypothesis that bees have several broadly tuned overlapping
filters with large fields that respond to the predominant
orientation in a region of the image, and others for
radial and circular patterns. Together with colour, these
filters are independent of range. Bees prefer to use landmarks
where they can, then global pattern at the largest
scale, and lastly the detail around the goal. The way that
discrimination of one visual feature is independent of
other variables can be explained by models analogous to
the colour triangle in colour discrimination.
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BioEssays
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2037-12-31
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