Literature DB >> 23583550

Visual scene perception in navigating wood ants.

David D Lent1, Paul Graham, Thomas S Collett.   

Abstract

Ants, like honeybees, can set their travel direction along foraging routes using just the surrounding visual panorama. This ability gives us a way to explore how visual scenes are perceived. By training wood ants to follow a path in an artificial scene and then examining their path within transformed scenes, we identify several perceptual operations that contribute to the ants' choice of direction. The first is a novel extension to the known ability of insects to compute the "center of mass" of large shapes: ants learn a desired heading toward a point on a distant shape as the proportion of the shape that lies to the left and right of the aiming point--the 'fractional position of mass' (FPM). The second operation, the extraction of local visual features like oriented edges, is familiar from studies of shape perception. Ants may use such features for guidance by keeping them in desired retinal locations. Third, ants exhibit segmentation. They compute the learned FPM over the whole of a simple scene, but over a segmented region of a complex scene. We suggest how the three operations may combine to provide efficient directional guidance.
Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23583550     DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2013.03.016

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Biol        ISSN: 0960-9822            Impact factor:   10.834


  20 in total

Review 1.  Path integration, views, search, and matched filters: the contributions of Rüdiger Wehner to the study of orientation and navigation.

Authors:  Ken Cheng; Cody A Freas
Journal:  J Comp Physiol A Neuroethol Sens Neural Behav Physiol       Date:  2015-02-07       Impact factor: 1.836

2.  Visual scanning behaviours and their role in the navigation of the Australian desert ant Melophorus bagoti.

Authors:  Antoine Wystrach; Andrew Philippides; Amandine Aurejac; Ken Cheng; Paul Graham
Journal:  J Comp Physiol A Neuroethol Sens Neural Behav Physiol       Date:  2014-03-30       Impact factor: 1.836

3.  Homing in a tropical social wasp: role of spatial familiarity, motivation and age.

Authors:  Souvik Mandal; Anindita Brahma; Raghavendra Gadagkar
Journal:  J Comp Physiol A Neuroethol Sens Neural Behav Physiol       Date:  2017-07-27       Impact factor: 1.836

4.  Pheromone cue triggers switch between vectors in the desert harvest ant, Veromessor pergandei.

Authors:  Cody A Freas; Jenna V Congdon; Nicola J R Plowes; Marcia L Spetch
Journal:  Anim Cogn       Date:  2020-02-20       Impact factor: 3.084

5.  The effect of spatially restricted experience on extrapolating learned views in desert ants, Melophorus bagoti.

Authors:  Sudhakar Deeti; Kazuki Fujii; Ken Cheng
Journal:  Anim Cogn       Date:  2020-02-12       Impact factor: 3.084

6.  The forest or the trees: preference for global over local image processing is reversed by prior experience in honeybees.

Authors:  Aurore Avarguès-Weber; Adrian G Dyer; Noha Ferrah; Martin Giurfa
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2015-01-22       Impact factor: 5.349

Review 7.  From representations to servomechanisms to oscillators: my journey in the study of cognition.

Authors:  Ken Cheng
Journal:  Anim Cogn       Date:  2022-08-27       Impact factor: 2.899

8.  A desert ant's memory of recent visual experience and the control of route guidance.

Authors:  Matthew Collett
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2014-07-22       Impact factor: 5.349

Review 9.  Steering intermediate courses: desert ants combine information from various navigational routines.

Authors:  Rüdiger Wehner; Thierry Hoinville; Holk Cruse; Ken Cheng
Journal:  J Comp Physiol A Neuroethol Sens Neural Behav Physiol       Date:  2016-06-03       Impact factor: 1.836

Review 10.  Scene perception and the visual control of travel direction in navigating wood ants.

Authors:  Thomas S Collett; David D Lent; Paul Graham
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2014-01-06       Impact factor: 6.237

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.