SummaryUnlike creatures that walk, flying animals need to control their horizontal motion as well as their height above the ground. Research on insects, the first animals to evolve flight, has revealed several visual reflexes that are used to govern horizontal course. For example, insects orient toward prominent vertical features in their environment [1–5] and generate compensatory reactions to both rotations [6, 7] and translations [1, 8–11] of the visual world. Insects also avoid impending collisions by veering away from visual expansion [9, 12–14]. In contrast to this extensive understanding of the visual reflexes that regulate horizontal course, the sensory-motor mechanisms that animals use to control altitude are poorly understood. Usi...
The total power output of tethered flying Drosophila melanogaster in still air depends on translatio...
International audienceWhen insects are flying forward, the image of the environment sweeps backward ...
Continuous movement of striped patterns was presented on either side of a tethered fruitfly, Drosoph...
Unlike creatures that walk, flying animals need to control their horizontal motion as well as their ...
SummaryA recent study sheds new light on the visual cues used by Drosophila to regulate flight altit...
Flying insects use highly efficient visual strategies for stabilizing their motion in three-dimensio...
International audienceWhen insects are flying forward, the image of the ground sweeps backward acros...
Insects can smoothly control their height while flying by adjusting lift to maintain a set-point in ...
Apparent motion was simulated in the visual system of the tethered fruitfly Drosophila melanogaster ...
A computerized 360 degrees panorama allowed us to suppress most of the locomotion-induced visual fee...
International audienceWhen insects are flying forwards, the image of the ground sweeps backwards acr...
Experimental results from insect biology suggest that in flies visual cues provide important informa...
To perform daily flight tasks, insects rely heavily on their visual perception of a dynamic environm...
Flies display a sophisticated suite of aerial behaviours that require rapid sensory–motor processing...
International audienceWhen insects are flying forward, the image of the ground sweeps backward acros...
The total power output of tethered flying Drosophila melanogaster in still air depends on translatio...
International audienceWhen insects are flying forward, the image of the environment sweeps backward ...
Continuous movement of striped patterns was presented on either side of a tethered fruitfly, Drosoph...
Unlike creatures that walk, flying animals need to control their horizontal motion as well as their ...
SummaryA recent study sheds new light on the visual cues used by Drosophila to regulate flight altit...
Flying insects use highly efficient visual strategies for stabilizing their motion in three-dimensio...
International audienceWhen insects are flying forward, the image of the ground sweeps backward acros...
Insects can smoothly control their height while flying by adjusting lift to maintain a set-point in ...
Apparent motion was simulated in the visual system of the tethered fruitfly Drosophila melanogaster ...
A computerized 360 degrees panorama allowed us to suppress most of the locomotion-induced visual fee...
International audienceWhen insects are flying forwards, the image of the ground sweeps backwards acr...
Experimental results from insect biology suggest that in flies visual cues provide important informa...
To perform daily flight tasks, insects rely heavily on their visual perception of a dynamic environm...
Flies display a sophisticated suite of aerial behaviours that require rapid sensory–motor processing...
International audienceWhen insects are flying forward, the image of the ground sweeps backward acros...
The total power output of tethered flying Drosophila melanogaster in still air depends on translatio...
International audienceWhen insects are flying forward, the image of the environment sweeps backward ...
Continuous movement of striped patterns was presented on either side of a tethered fruitfly, Drosoph...