Humans have long marveled at the ability of animals to navigate swiftly, accurately, and across long distances. Many mechanisms have been proposed for how animals acquire, store, and retrace learned routes, yet many of these hypotheses appear incongruent with behavioral observations and the animals’ neural constraints. The “Navigation by Scene Familiarity Hypothesis” proposed originally for insect navigation offers an elegantly simple solution for retracing previously experienced routes without the need for complex neural architectures and memory retrieval mechanisms. This hypothesis proposes that an animal can return to a target location by simply moving toward the most familiar scene at any given point. Proof of concept simulations have u...
Insects have a brain weighing about a tenth of a milligram. Nevertheless some in-sect species exhibi...
Navigation is an essential skill for many animals, and understanding how animal use environmental in...
The remarkable navigational abilities of social insects are proof that small brains can produce exqu...
Humans have long marveled at the ability of animals to navigate swiftly, accurately, and across long...
Humans have long marveled at the ability of animals to navigate swiftly, accurately, and across long...
Small-brained insects are expert at many tasks that are currently difficult for robots, but especial...
Insect-Inspired models of visual navigation, that operate by scanning for familiar views of the worl...
The navigation of bees and ants from hive to food and back has captivated people for more than a cen...
In this paper we propose a model of visually guided route navigation in ants that captures the known...
The use of visual information for navigation appears to be a universal strategy for sighted animals,...
Animals are often able to solve complex navigational tasks in very challenging terrain, despite usi...
Visual navigation is a critical behaviour formanyanimals, and it has been particularly well studied...
The visual systems of all animals are used to provide information that can guide behaviour. In some ...
This abstract summarises a model of route navigation inspired by the behaviour of ants presented ful...
Insects have — over millions of years of evolution — perfected many of the systems that roboticists ...
Insects have a brain weighing about a tenth of a milligram. Nevertheless some in-sect species exhibi...
Navigation is an essential skill for many animals, and understanding how animal use environmental in...
The remarkable navigational abilities of social insects are proof that small brains can produce exqu...
Humans have long marveled at the ability of animals to navigate swiftly, accurately, and across long...
Humans have long marveled at the ability of animals to navigate swiftly, accurately, and across long...
Small-brained insects are expert at many tasks that are currently difficult for robots, but especial...
Insect-Inspired models of visual navigation, that operate by scanning for familiar views of the worl...
The navigation of bees and ants from hive to food and back has captivated people for more than a cen...
In this paper we propose a model of visually guided route navigation in ants that captures the known...
The use of visual information for navigation appears to be a universal strategy for sighted animals,...
Animals are often able to solve complex navigational tasks in very challenging terrain, despite usi...
Visual navigation is a critical behaviour formanyanimals, and it has been particularly well studied...
The visual systems of all animals are used to provide information that can guide behaviour. In some ...
This abstract summarises a model of route navigation inspired by the behaviour of ants presented ful...
Insects have — over millions of years of evolution — perfected many of the systems that roboticists ...
Insects have a brain weighing about a tenth of a milligram. Nevertheless some in-sect species exhibi...
Navigation is an essential skill for many animals, and understanding how animal use environmental in...
The remarkable navigational abilities of social insects are proof that small brains can produce exqu...