Visual motor computations in insects

Date

2004

Authors

Srinivasan, Mandyam V
Zhang, Shao Wu

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Annual Reviews Inc

Abstract

With their relatively simple nervous systems and purpose-designed behaviors and reflexes, insects are an excellent organism in which to investigate how visual information is acquired and processed to guide locomotion and navigation. Flies maintain a straight course and monitor their motion through the environment by sensing the patterns of optic flow induced in the eyes. Bees negotiate narrow gaps by balancing the speeds of the images in their two eyes, and they control flight speed by holding constant the average image velocity as seen with their two eyes. Bees achieve a smooth landing on a horizontal surface by holding the image velocity of the surface constant during approach, thus ensuring that flight speed is automatically close to zero at touchdown. Foraging bees estimate the distance that they have traveled to reach a food source by integrating the optic flow experienced en route; this integration gives them a visually driven "odometer." Insects have also evolved sophisticated visuomotor mechanisms for pursuing prey or mates and possibly for concealing their own motion while shadowing objects of interest.

Description

Keywords

Keywords: animal behavior; distance perception; evolutionary adaptation; flight; flying; insect; motor activity; nonhuman; perceptive discrimination; priority journal; review; velocity; vision; visual discrimination; visual system; Animals; Behavior, Animal; Centra Bee; Behavior; Fly; Navigation; Vision

Citation

Source

Annual Review of Neuroscience

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until