Honeybees (Apis mellifera) learn the orientation of edges or bars in order to recognise a visual pattern. A number of findings published in recent years suggest that the bee's perception of pattern orientation is independent of other visual cues and is supported by a distinct visual subsystem. The main objective of this thesis is to study the characteristics of this subsystem in detail. A series of behavioural experiments was carried out to investigate both the chromatic and temporal properties of the bee's orientation analysis. Measurements of orientation discrimination using gratings offering different magnitudes of contrast to the bee's three receptor. types revealed that the bee's orientation analysis relies solely on input fro...
Because bees fly around, visit flowers and chase mates, we conclude intuitively that they see things...
Bees were trained to discriminate between two or more black bars and similar bars at right angles, p...
Honey bees (Apis mellifera, worker) were trained to discriminate between two random gratings oriente...
The ability of honeybees (Apis mellifera) to discriminate pattern orientation was evaluated by exami...
The spectral properties of the discrimination of pattern orientation in freely flying honeybees (Api...
The ability of honeybees (Apis mellifera) to learn and recognise peripherally presented patterns was...
To explore how honeybees, Apis cerana, discriminate the orientation of patterns, we trained workers ...
Honey bees (Apis mellifera, worker) were trained to discriminate between two random gratings oriente...
The roles of eidetic imagery and orientational cues, respectively, in the discrimination of visual p...
AbstractWhen vertically presented patterns are fixed in relation to the point of choice of the bees,...
The visual discrimination of patterns of two equal orthogonal black bars by honeybees has been stud...
The Y-choice apparatus, in which freely flying bees choose one of two targets from a fixed distance...
A new cue for visual discrimination by the honeybee has been demonstrated. Bees detected the positio...
The biology of honeybees predisposes them to learn the colours and shapes of food-bearing flowers ra...
Bees were trained to discriminate between a pattern with two or more black bars and a similar patter...
Because bees fly around, visit flowers and chase mates, we conclude intuitively that they see things...
Bees were trained to discriminate between two or more black bars and similar bars at right angles, p...
Honey bees (Apis mellifera, worker) were trained to discriminate between two random gratings oriente...
The ability of honeybees (Apis mellifera) to discriminate pattern orientation was evaluated by exami...
The spectral properties of the discrimination of pattern orientation in freely flying honeybees (Api...
The ability of honeybees (Apis mellifera) to learn and recognise peripherally presented patterns was...
To explore how honeybees, Apis cerana, discriminate the orientation of patterns, we trained workers ...
Honey bees (Apis mellifera, worker) were trained to discriminate between two random gratings oriente...
The roles of eidetic imagery and orientational cues, respectively, in the discrimination of visual p...
AbstractWhen vertically presented patterns are fixed in relation to the point of choice of the bees,...
The visual discrimination of patterns of two equal orthogonal black bars by honeybees has been stud...
The Y-choice apparatus, in which freely flying bees choose one of two targets from a fixed distance...
A new cue for visual discrimination by the honeybee has been demonstrated. Bees detected the positio...
The biology of honeybees predisposes them to learn the colours and shapes of food-bearing flowers ra...
Bees were trained to discriminate between a pattern with two or more black bars and a similar patter...
Because bees fly around, visit flowers and chase mates, we conclude intuitively that they see things...
Bees were trained to discriminate between two or more black bars and similar bars at right angles, p...
Honey bees (Apis mellifera, worker) were trained to discriminate between two random gratings oriente...