International audienceFlying insects keep their visual system horizontally aligned, suggesting that gaze stabilization is a crucial first step in flight control. Unlike flies, hymenopteran insects such as bees and wasps do not have halteres that provide fast, feed-forward angular rate information to stabilize head orientation in the presence of body rotations. We tested whether hymenopteran insects use inertial (mechanosensory) information to control head orientation from other sources, such as the wings, by applying periodic roll perturbations to male Polistes humilis wasps flying in tether under different visual conditions indoors and in natural outdoor conditions. We oscillated the thorax of the insects with frequency-modulated sinusoids...
Flying blowflies shift their gaze by saccadic turns of body and head, keeping their gaze basically f...
In the absence of much passive stability, flying insects rely upon active stabilisation, necessitati...
Kress D, Egelhaaf M. Head and body stabilization in blowflies walking on differently structured subs...
Flying insects keep their visual system horizontally aligned, suggesting that gaze stabilization is ...
International audienceThe ability of hoverflies to control their head orientation with respect to th...
As animals travel through the environment, powerful reflexes help stabilize their gaze by actively m...
Flying insects, like many other animals that rely on their sense of vision to guide behaviour, have ...
In the blowflyCalliphora flying stationarily in a wind tunnel, compensatory head movements were elic...
Vision is a key sensory modality for flying insects, playing an important role in guidance, navigati...
Flies display a sophisticated suite of aerial behaviours that require rapid sensory–motor processing...
Flying insects use compensatory head movements to stabilize gaze. Like other optokinetic responses, ...
Insects are inherently unstable and therefore rely on sensory feedback in order to maintain flight ...
Video records were made of the blowfly Calliphora erythrocephala L. mainly during tethered flight in...
International audienceWhen taking off from a sloping surface, flies have to reorient themselves dors...
along their body axes (lift, slip, thrust), and three of rotation about these axes (yaw, pitch, roll...
Flying blowflies shift their gaze by saccadic turns of body and head, keeping their gaze basically f...
In the absence of much passive stability, flying insects rely upon active stabilisation, necessitati...
Kress D, Egelhaaf M. Head and body stabilization in blowflies walking on differently structured subs...
Flying insects keep their visual system horizontally aligned, suggesting that gaze stabilization is ...
International audienceThe ability of hoverflies to control their head orientation with respect to th...
As animals travel through the environment, powerful reflexes help stabilize their gaze by actively m...
Flying insects, like many other animals that rely on their sense of vision to guide behaviour, have ...
In the blowflyCalliphora flying stationarily in a wind tunnel, compensatory head movements were elic...
Vision is a key sensory modality for flying insects, playing an important role in guidance, navigati...
Flies display a sophisticated suite of aerial behaviours that require rapid sensory–motor processing...
Flying insects use compensatory head movements to stabilize gaze. Like other optokinetic responses, ...
Insects are inherently unstable and therefore rely on sensory feedback in order to maintain flight ...
Video records were made of the blowfly Calliphora erythrocephala L. mainly during tethered flight in...
International audienceWhen taking off from a sloping surface, flies have to reorient themselves dors...
along their body axes (lift, slip, thrust), and three of rotation about these axes (yaw, pitch, roll...
Flying blowflies shift their gaze by saccadic turns of body and head, keeping their gaze basically f...
In the absence of much passive stability, flying insects rely upon active stabilisation, necessitati...
Kress D, Egelhaaf M. Head and body stabilization in blowflies walking on differently structured subs...