Many insects\u27 motion vision is achromatic and thus dependent on brightness rather than on colour contrast. We investigate whether this is true of the butterfly Papilio xuthus, an animal noted for its complex retinal organization, by measuring head movements of restrained animals in response to moving two-colour patterns. Responses were never eliminated across a range of relative colour intensities, indicating that motion can be detected through chromatic contrast in the absence of luminance contrast. Furthermore, we identify an interaction between colour and contrast polarity in sensitivity to achromatic patterns, suggesting that ON and OFF contrasts are processed by two channels with different spectral sensitivities. We propose a model ...
This study focuses on the sense of brightness in the foraging Japanese yellow swallowtail butterfly,...
Vision, body colouration and the visual environment of an animal may be tuned to each other. This th...
Visual information is processed in a series of subsequent steps. The performance of each of these st...
Butterflies of the genus Papilio have polarisation-sensitive photoreceptors in all regions of the ey...
Butterflies of the genus Papilio have polarisation-sensitive photoreceptors in all regions of the ey...
Self-motion detectors of the dragonfly ventral cord have large fields that are sensitive to whole-fi...
Theories based on optimal sampling by the retina have been widely applied to visual ecology at the l...
This paper gives an overview of behavioral studies on the color and polarization vision of the Japan...
Visual movement detection has been investigated both under photopic and scotopic light conditions by...
The first step in this work of reconstruction of a theory of insect vision was to demonstrate that v...
Copyright © 2004 ARVOHow do animals regulate self-movement despite large variation in the luminance ...
Many visual animals exploit spectral information for seeking food and mates, for identifying preys a...
Copyright © 2005 SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering. Downloading of the abstra...
Abstract Color and motion are used by many species to identify salient objects. They are processed l...
Spatial resolution of insect compound eyes is much coarser than that of humans: a single pixel of th...
This study focuses on the sense of brightness in the foraging Japanese yellow swallowtail butterfly,...
Vision, body colouration and the visual environment of an animal may be tuned to each other. This th...
Visual information is processed in a series of subsequent steps. The performance of each of these st...
Butterflies of the genus Papilio have polarisation-sensitive photoreceptors in all regions of the ey...
Butterflies of the genus Papilio have polarisation-sensitive photoreceptors in all regions of the ey...
Self-motion detectors of the dragonfly ventral cord have large fields that are sensitive to whole-fi...
Theories based on optimal sampling by the retina have been widely applied to visual ecology at the l...
This paper gives an overview of behavioral studies on the color and polarization vision of the Japan...
Visual movement detection has been investigated both under photopic and scotopic light conditions by...
The first step in this work of reconstruction of a theory of insect vision was to demonstrate that v...
Copyright © 2004 ARVOHow do animals regulate self-movement despite large variation in the luminance ...
Many visual animals exploit spectral information for seeking food and mates, for identifying preys a...
Copyright © 2005 SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering. Downloading of the abstra...
Abstract Color and motion are used by many species to identify salient objects. They are processed l...
Spatial resolution of insect compound eyes is much coarser than that of humans: a single pixel of th...
This study focuses on the sense of brightness in the foraging Japanese yellow swallowtail butterfly,...
Vision, body colouration and the visual environment of an animal may be tuned to each other. This th...
Visual information is processed in a series of subsequent steps. The performance of each of these st...