Range perception through apparent image speed in freely flying honeybees.
about
Aerodynamics, sensing and control of insect-scale flapping-wing flightDynamic Echo Information Guides Flight in the Big Brown Bat.Honeybees' speed depends on dorsal as well as lateral, ventral and frontal optic flowsThe need for speed: global optic flow speed influences steeringMotor patterns during active electrosensory acquisition.Chasing behavior and optomotor following in free-flying male blowflies: flight performance and interactions of the underlying control systems.Behavioural system identification of visual flight speed control in Drosophila melanogaster.Visual guidance of forward flight in hummingbirds reveals control based on image features instead of pattern velocityHow bumblebees use lateral and ventral optic flow cues for position control in environments of different proximity.Parkinson's disease as a disconnection syndromeVisuospatial perception and navigation in Parkinson's diseaseHummingbirds control hovering flight by stabilizing visual motion.Effects of Parkinson's disease on optic flow perception for heading direction during navigation.Insect-Inspired Self-Motion Estimation with Dense Flow Fields--An Adaptive Matched Filter Approach.Temporal and spatial adaptation of transient responses to local featuresNonlinear circuits for naturalistic visual motion estimation.Embodied linearity of speed control in Drosophila melanogaster.Spatial vision in insects is facilitated by shaping the dynamics of visual input through behavioral actionImpact of optic flow perception and egocentric coordinates on veering in Parkinson's disease.Flying fruit flies correct for visual sideslip depending on relative speed of forward optic flow.Airflow and optic flow mediate antennal positioning in flying honeybees.Effects of optic flow speed and lateral flow asymmetry on locomotion in younger and older adults: a virtual reality study.How do animals get about by vision? Visually controlled locomotion and orientation after 50 years.A universal strategy for visually guided landingOptimal motor control may mask sensory dynamics.Fly motion vision is based on Reichardt detectors regardless of the signal-to-noise ratio.Scene perception and the visual control of travel direction in navigating wood antsThe spatial frequency tuning of optic-flow-dependent behaviors in the bumblebee Bombus impatiens.Control of self-motion in dynamic fluids: fish do it differently from bees.Speed discrimination in the far monocular periphery: A relative advantage for interocular comparisons consistent with self-motion.Infant-specific gaze patterns in response to radial optic flow.Modeling the influence of optic flow on grid cell firing in the absence of other cues1.Direct Evidence for Vision-based Control of Flight Speed in BudgerigarsNocturnal insects use optic flow for flight controlMulti-camera real-time three-dimensional tracking of multiple flying animals.Pigeons (C. livia) Follow Their Head during Turning Flight: Head Stabilization Underlies the Visual Control of Flight.Neural basis of forward flight control and landing in honeybees.High contrast sensitivity for visually guided flight control in bumblebees.Contrast thresholds reveal different visual masking functions in humans and praying mantises.Evidence for velocity-tuned motion-sensitive descending neurons in the honeybee.
P2860
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P2860
Range perception through apparent image speed in freely flying honeybees.
description
1991 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
1991年の論文
@ja
1991年学术文章
@wuu
1991年学术文章
@zh-cn
1991年学术文章
@zh-hans
1991年学术文章
@zh-my
1991年学术文章
@zh-sg
1991年學術文章
@yue
1991年學術文章
@zh
1991年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
Range perception through apparent image speed in freely flying honeybees.
@en
Range perception through apparent image speed in freely flying honeybees.
@nl
type
label
Range perception through apparent image speed in freely flying honeybees.
@en
Range perception through apparent image speed in freely flying honeybees.
@nl
prefLabel
Range perception through apparent image speed in freely flying honeybees.
@en
Range perception through apparent image speed in freely flying honeybees.
@nl
P2093
P1433
P1476
Range perception through apparent image speed in freely flying honeybees.
@en
P2093
Kirchner WH
Srinivasan MV
P304
P577
1991-05-01T00:00:00Z