SummaryAnts, like honeybees, can set their travel direction along foraging routes using just the surrounding visual panorama [1–5]. This ability gives us a way to explore how visual scenes are perceived. By training wood ants to follow a path in an artificial scene and then examining their path within transformed scenes, we identify several perceptual operations that contribute to the ants’ choice of direction. The first is a novel extension to the known ability of insects to compute the “center of mass” of large shapes [6–9]: ants learn a desired heading toward a point on a distant shape as the proportion of the shape that lies to the left and right of the aiming point—the ‘fractional position of mass’ (FPM). The second operation, the extr...
Foragers of many ant species learn long, visually guided routes between their nest and profitable fe...
Under some circumstances, Diptera and Hymenoptera learn visual shapes retinotopically, so that they ...
Some ants and bees readily learn visually guided routes between their nests and feeding sites. They ...
SummaryAnts, like honeybees, can set their travel direction along foraging routes using just the sur...
Bees and ants can control their direction of travel within a familiar landscape using the informatio...
A natural visual panorama is a complex stimulus formed of many component shapes. It gives an animal ...
Visual memories of landmarks play a major role in guiding the habitual foraging routes of ants and b...
The visual systems of all animals are used to provide information that can guide behaviour. In some ...
SummaryAnts are so low to the ground that slight undulations in the terrain over which they navigate...
AbstractInsects are thought to pinpoint a place by using memorized “snapshots,” i.e., two-dimensiona...
Visual navigation is a critical behaviour formanyanimals, and it has been particularly well studied...
Solitary foraging ants rely on vision when travelling along routes and when pinpointing their nest. ...
Wood ants, like other central place foragers, rely on route memories to guide them to and from a rel...
SummaryForagers of many ant species learn long, visually guided routes between their nest and profit...
Foragers of many ant species learn long, visually guided routes between their nest and profitable fe...
Foragers of many ant species learn long, visually guided routes between their nest and profitable fe...
Under some circumstances, Diptera and Hymenoptera learn visual shapes retinotopically, so that they ...
Some ants and bees readily learn visually guided routes between their nests and feeding sites. They ...
SummaryAnts, like honeybees, can set their travel direction along foraging routes using just the sur...
Bees and ants can control their direction of travel within a familiar landscape using the informatio...
A natural visual panorama is a complex stimulus formed of many component shapes. It gives an animal ...
Visual memories of landmarks play a major role in guiding the habitual foraging routes of ants and b...
The visual systems of all animals are used to provide information that can guide behaviour. In some ...
SummaryAnts are so low to the ground that slight undulations in the terrain over which they navigate...
AbstractInsects are thought to pinpoint a place by using memorized “snapshots,” i.e., two-dimensiona...
Visual navigation is a critical behaviour formanyanimals, and it has been particularly well studied...
Solitary foraging ants rely on vision when travelling along routes and when pinpointing their nest. ...
Wood ants, like other central place foragers, rely on route memories to guide them to and from a rel...
SummaryForagers of many ant species learn long, visually guided routes between their nest and profit...
Foragers of many ant species learn long, visually guided routes between their nest and profitable fe...
Foragers of many ant species learn long, visually guided routes between their nest and profitable fe...
Under some circumstances, Diptera and Hymenoptera learn visual shapes retinotopically, so that they ...
Some ants and bees readily learn visually guided routes between their nests and feeding sites. They ...