Literature DB >> 10555268

Motion and vision: why animals move their eyes.

M F Land1.   

Abstract

Nearly all animals with good vision have a repertoire of eye movements. The majority show a pattern of stable fixations with fast saccades that shift the direction of gaze. These movements may be made by the eyes themselves, or the head, or in some insects the whole body. The main reason for keeping gaze still during fixations is the need to avoid the blur that results from the long response time of the photoreceptors. Blur begins to degrade the image at a retinal velocity of about 1 receptor acceptance angle per response time. Some insects (e.g. hoverflies) stabilise their gaze much more rigidly than this rule implies, and it is suggested that the need to see the motion of small objects against a background imposes even more stringent conditions on image motion. A third reason for preventing rotational image motion is to prevent contamination of the translational flow-field, by which a moving animal can judge its heading and the distances of objects. Some animals do let their eyes rotate smoothly, and these include some heteropod molluscs, mantis shrimps and jumping spiders, all of which have narrow linear retinae which scan across the surroundings. Hymenopteran insects also rotate during orientation flights at speeds of 100-200 degrees s-1. This is just consistent with a blur-free image, as are the scanning speeds of the animals with linear retinae.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10555268     DOI: 10.1007/s003590050393

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Comp Physiol A            Impact factor:   1.836


  107 in total

1.  Motion perception of saccade-induced retinal translation.

Authors:  Eric Castet; Sébastien Jeanjean; Guillaume S Masson
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2002-11-04       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 2.  Eye movements and their functions in everyday tasks.

Authors:  T Foulsham
Journal:  Eye (Lond)       Date:  2014-11-14       Impact factor: 3.775

3.  Saccadic head and thorax movements in freely walking blowflies.

Authors:  G Blaj; J H van Hateren
Journal:  J Comp Physiol A Neuroethol Sens Neural Behav Physiol       Date:  2004-07-20       Impact factor: 1.836

4.  Galvanic stimulation of the vestibular periphery in guinea pigs during passive whole body rotation and self-generated head movement.

Authors:  N Shanidze; K Lim; J Dye; W M King
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2012-01-18       Impact factor: 2.714

5.  Invariant Visual Object and Face Recognition: Neural and Computational Bases, and a Model, VisNet.

Authors:  Edmund T Rolls
Journal:  Front Comput Neurosci       Date:  2012-06-19       Impact factor: 2.380

Review 6.  Anticipatory eye movements stabilize gaze during self-generated head movements.

Authors:  W M King; Natela Shanidze
Journal:  Ann N Y Acad Sci       Date:  2011-09       Impact factor: 5.691

7.  Diverse speed response properties of motion sensitive neurons in the fly's optic lobe.

Authors:  John K Douglass; Nicholas J Strausfeld
Journal:  J Comp Physiol A Neuroethol Sens Neural Behav Physiol       Date:  2006-11-15       Impact factor: 1.836

8.  Steering by hearing: a bat's acoustic gaze is linked to its flight motor output by a delayed, adaptive linear law.

Authors:  Kaushik Ghose; Cynthia F Moss
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2006-02-08       Impact factor: 6.167

9.  Looking and homing: how displaced ants decide where to go.

Authors:  Jochen Zeil; Ajay Narendra; Wolfgang Stürzl
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2014-01-06       Impact factor: 6.237

10.  Free flight maneuvers of stalk-eyed flies: do eye-stalks affect aerial turning behavior?

Authors:  Gal Ribak; John G Swallow
Journal:  J Comp Physiol A Neuroethol Sens Neural Behav Physiol       Date:  2007-08-21       Impact factor: 1.836

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