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Keywords: Optic flow
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Journal Articles
Journal Articles
J Exp Biol (2023) 226 (5): jeb244256.
Published: 14 March 2023
...John G. Whitehead; Terrell Worrell; John J. Socha ABSTRACT Many flying animals use optic flow to control their flight. During landing maneuvers, pigeons, hummingbirds, bats, Draco lizards and bees use the -constant braking strategy. This strategy regulates the approach by keeping the ratio...
Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Articles
In collection:
Neuroethology
J Exp Biol (2021) 224 (14): jeb242219.
Published: 23 July 2021
.... Summary: Flies rendered genetically motion-blind have difficulty maintaining a straight flight trajectory and exhibit pronounced circling behaviour following unilateral wing clipping, indicating a stabilizing influence of motion vision on course control. Motion vision Optic flow Course control...
Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Articles
J Exp Biol (2021) 224 (11): jeb237867.
Published: 11 June 2021
... on visual memories to solve conflicting situations. We investigated whether the observed behaviour was due to other guidance systems, such as path integration or optic flow-based flight control, and found that neither of these systems was sufficient to explain the behaviour. * Author for correspondence...
Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Articles
J Exp Biol (2021) 224 (9): jeb242404.
Published: 13 May 2021
.... Most studies on the dance-related odometer are based on experiments with Apis mellifera foragers trained in small tunnels with black and white patterns, which allows the creation of quantifiable changes in optic flow. In this study, we determined the waggle phase duration-distance curves of two Asian...
Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Articles
J Exp Biol (2020) 223 (11): jeb210104.
Published: 8 June 2020
...-licence-1-1/ Summary: When flying in a flight mill, flies with constrained body pitch compensate external visual perturbations applied to their retinal slip by changing their flight speed. Visual control Optic flow Insect flight Locomotor constraint Flying insects rely heavily...
Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Articles
J Exp Biol (2019) 222 (13): jeb199406.
Published: 5 July 2019
...Anna Stöckl; Rebecca Grittner; Keram Pfeiffer ABSTRACT Flying animals require sensory feedback on changes of their body position, as well as on their distance from nearby objects. The apparent image motion, or optic flow, which is generated as animals move through the air, can provide...
Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Articles
In collection:
Neuroethology
J Exp Biol (2019) 222 (2): jeb184135.
Published: 25 January 2019
... gradually traded off their longitudinal velocity to lateral velocity and approached the gap with increasing lateral displacement and lateral velocity. Bumblebees shaped their flight trajectory depending on the salience of the gap, indicated in our case by the optic flow contrast between the region within...
Journal Articles
In collection:
Neuroethology
J Exp Biol (2018) 221 (21): jeb178210.
Published: 31 October 2018
...Sean Copley; Kalyanasundaram Parthasarathy; Mark A. Willis ABSTRACT While tracking odor plumes, male hawkmoths use optic flow cues to stabilize their flight movements with respect to their environment. We studied the responses of freely flying moths tracking odor plumes in a laboratory wind tunnel...
Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Articles
J Exp Biol (2018) 221 (20): jeb184267.
Published: 17 October 2018
.... The visual resolution that limits the detection and use of optic flow for flight control in both species of honeybee is lower than the previously anatomically determined resolution and differs from object detection limits of A. mellifera , providing evidence that the limits of spatial resolution and contrast...
Journal Articles
J Exp Biol (2017) 220 (23): 4339–4346.
Published: 1 December 2017
.../ Summary: We propose that the neural mechanisms of the honey bee dance language involve systems of orientation and spatial processing discovered in the central complex of the insect brain. Apis Central complex Ellipsoid body Exaptation Optic flow Orientation Honey bee ( Apis ) dance...
Journal Articles
J Exp Biol (2017) 220 (11): 2005–2016.
Published: 1 June 2017
... flying insects respond to changes in wind speed and surrounding optic flow, the open-loop sensorimotor response of female Queensland fruit flies ( Bactrocera tryoni ) was examined. A total of 136 flies were exposed to stimuli comprising sinusoidally varying optic flow and air flow (simulating forward...
Journal Articles
J Exp Biol (2017) 220 (8): 1503–1508.
Published: 15 April 2017
...Bart R. H. Geurten; Benedikt Niesterok; Guido Dehnhardt; Frederike D. Hanke ABSTRACT Moving animals can estimate the distance of visual objects from image shift on their retina (optic flow) created during translational, but not rotational movements. To facilitate this distance estimation, many...
Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Articles
J Exp Biol (2017) 220 (2): 259–265.
Published: 15 January 2017
...) changes in direction of the substratum are detected by the anterior lateral eyes (ALEs); and (iii) in relation to the linear component of the outbound run, an increase of optic flow, in either the lateral or ventral fields of view, caused spiders to search for the burrow at a point nearer to the goal...
Journal Articles
J Exp Biol (2016) 219 (18): 2819–2822.
Published: 15 September 2016
... The authors declare no competing or financial interests. 25 1 2016 10 7 2016 © 2016. Published by The Company of Biologists Ltd 2016 Summary: Wind alters bumblebee landing performance and may preclude optic flow-based strategies for control of landing speed. Insect flight...
Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Articles
J Exp Biol (2014) 217 (19): 3504–3511.
Published: 1 October 2014
... control Optic flow Rotation Tarsal reflex Some flightless animals possess the ability to control body orientation while falling through air ( Dudley et al., 2007 ; Dudley and Yanoviak, 2011 ; Jusufi et al., 2011 ; Yanoviak et al., 2005 ; Yanoviak et al., 2010 ; Yanoviak et al., 2011...
Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Articles
J Exp Biol (2014) 217 (12): 2041–2043.
Published: 15 June 2014
...Alberto Ugolini The problem sandhoppers face when they find themselves on the dry sand is to reach as quickly as possible the belt of moist sand near the water. In the present study, I ask whether, alongside many other orienting factors, sandhoppers use the optic flow they experience to maintain...
Journal Articles
J Exp Biol (2014) 217 (3): 395–401.
Published: 1 February 2014
... eyes. Secondly, we changed the optic flow supplied by a black-and-white grating (λ=2 cm) perceived either in the lateral or in the ventral field of view. Finally, the period of the lateral or ventral grating was changed from λ=2 cm to λ=1 cm. Our results indicate that visual information contributes...
Journal Articles
J Exp Biol (2013) 216 (21): 4011–4024.
Published: 1 November 2013
...Joseph Bak-Coleman; Autumn Court; D. A. Paley; S. Coombs SUMMARY Rheotaxis is a robust, multisensory behavior with many potential benefits for fish and other aquatic organisms. Visual (optic flow) cues appear to be sufficient for rheotaxis, but other sensory cues can clearly compensate for the loss...
Journal Articles
J Exp Biol (2012) 215 (18): 3155–3160.
Published: 15 September 2012
... mellifera and the stingless bee Melipona seminigra measure distance visually using optic flow–movement of images as they pass across the retina. The honey bees gauge height using image motion in the ventral visual field. The stingless bees forage at different tropical forest canopy levels, ranging up to 40...