Honeybees (Apis mellifera) have remarkable visual learning and discrimination abilities that extend beyond learning simple colours, shapes or patterns. They can discriminate landscape scenes, types of flowers, and even human faces. This suggests that in spite of their small brain, honeybees have a highly developed capacity for processing complex visual information, comparable in many respects to vertebrates. Here, we investigated whether this capacity extends to complex images that humans distinguish on the basis of artistic style: Impressionist paintings by Monet and Cubist paintings by Picasso. We show that honeybees learned to simultaneously discriminate between five different Monet and Picasso paintings, and that they do not rely on lum...
The ability to navigate long distances to find rewarding flowers and return home is a key factor in ...
For many years, two opposing theories have dominated our ideas of what honeybees see. The earliest p...
For a reward of sugar, bees will learn to prefer a pattern rather than an alternative similar one. T...
Recent work has revealed that monkeys as well as pigeons are able to categorise complex visual objec...
The biology of honeybees predisposes them to learn the colours and shapes of food-bearing flowers ra...
We studied whether honeybees can distinguish face-like configurations by using standardized stimuli ...
By working with very simple images, a number of different visual cues used by the honeybee have been...
Recognising complex three-dimensional objects presents significant challenges to visual systems when...
Recognising individuals using facial cues is an important ability. There is evidence that the mammal...
Angiosperms have evolved to attract and/or deter specific pollinators. Flowers provide signals and c...
By working with very simple images, a number of different visual cues used by the honeybee have been...
Among the so-called simpler organisms, the honey bee is one of the few examples of an animal with a ...
Among the so-called simpler organisms, the honey bee is one of the few examples of an animal with a ...
During a century of studies on honeybee vision, generalization was the word for the acceptance of an...
abstract: This study illustrates the abilities of the honeybee, Apis mellifera, to learn and differe...
The ability to navigate long distances to find rewarding flowers and return home is a key factor in ...
For many years, two opposing theories have dominated our ideas of what honeybees see. The earliest p...
For a reward of sugar, bees will learn to prefer a pattern rather than an alternative similar one. T...
Recent work has revealed that monkeys as well as pigeons are able to categorise complex visual objec...
The biology of honeybees predisposes them to learn the colours and shapes of food-bearing flowers ra...
We studied whether honeybees can distinguish face-like configurations by using standardized stimuli ...
By working with very simple images, a number of different visual cues used by the honeybee have been...
Recognising complex three-dimensional objects presents significant challenges to visual systems when...
Recognising individuals using facial cues is an important ability. There is evidence that the mammal...
Angiosperms have evolved to attract and/or deter specific pollinators. Flowers provide signals and c...
By working with very simple images, a number of different visual cues used by the honeybee have been...
Among the so-called simpler organisms, the honey bee is one of the few examples of an animal with a ...
Among the so-called simpler organisms, the honey bee is one of the few examples of an animal with a ...
During a century of studies on honeybee vision, generalization was the word for the acceptance of an...
abstract: This study illustrates the abilities of the honeybee, Apis mellifera, to learn and differe...
The ability to navigate long distances to find rewarding flowers and return home is a key factor in ...
For many years, two opposing theories have dominated our ideas of what honeybees see. The earliest p...
For a reward of sugar, bees will learn to prefer a pattern rather than an alternative similar one. T...