AbstractAs a result of the spider experiments in Nagata et al. (2012), it was hypothesized that the depth perception mechanisms of these animals should be based on how much images are defocused. In the present paper, assuming that relative chromatic aberrations or blur radii values are known, we develop a formulation relating the values of these cues to the actual depth distance. Taking into account the form of the resulting signals, we propose the use of latency coding from a spiking neuron obeying Izhikevich’s ‘simple model’. If spider jumps can be viewed as approximately parabolic, some estimates allow for a sensory-motor relation between the time to the first spike and the magnitude of the initial velocity of the jump
To perceive the visual world as three-dimensional, the brain has to reconstruct spatial structure fr...
Sighted animals must survive in an environment that is diverse yet highly structured. Neural-coding ...
A central function of vision is determining the layout and size of objects in the visual field, both...
Jumping spiders are capable of estimating the distance to their prey relying only on the information...
Jumping spiders are capable of estimating the distance to their prey relying only on the information...
The principal eyes of jumping spiders have a unique retina with four tiered photoreceptor layers, on...
Li J, Lindemann JP, Egelhaaf M. Peripheral Processing Facilitates Optic Flow-Based Depth Perception....
Blur from defocus can be both useful and detrimental for visual perception: It can be useful as a so...
Blur from defocus can be both useful and detrimental for visual perception: It can be useful as a so...
Schwegmann A, Lindemann JP, Egelhaaf M. Depth information in natural environments derived from optic...
Liang P, Heitwerth J, Kern R, Kurtz R, Egelhaaf M. Object representation and distance encoding in th...
AbstractThe perception of depth from relative motion is believed to be a slow process that “builds-u...
AbstractJumping spiders (Salticidae) are renowned for their high performing visual system. In additi...
AbstractThe sign of an accommodative response is provided by differences in chromatic aberration bet...
Jumping spiders use defocus as a gauge of depth perception to locate prey.2 page(s
To perceive the visual world as three-dimensional, the brain has to reconstruct spatial structure fr...
Sighted animals must survive in an environment that is diverse yet highly structured. Neural-coding ...
A central function of vision is determining the layout and size of objects in the visual field, both...
Jumping spiders are capable of estimating the distance to their prey relying only on the information...
Jumping spiders are capable of estimating the distance to their prey relying only on the information...
The principal eyes of jumping spiders have a unique retina with four tiered photoreceptor layers, on...
Li J, Lindemann JP, Egelhaaf M. Peripheral Processing Facilitates Optic Flow-Based Depth Perception....
Blur from defocus can be both useful and detrimental for visual perception: It can be useful as a so...
Blur from defocus can be both useful and detrimental for visual perception: It can be useful as a so...
Schwegmann A, Lindemann JP, Egelhaaf M. Depth information in natural environments derived from optic...
Liang P, Heitwerth J, Kern R, Kurtz R, Egelhaaf M. Object representation and distance encoding in th...
AbstractThe perception of depth from relative motion is believed to be a slow process that “builds-u...
AbstractJumping spiders (Salticidae) are renowned for their high performing visual system. In additi...
AbstractThe sign of an accommodative response is provided by differences in chromatic aberration bet...
Jumping spiders use defocus as a gauge of depth perception to locate prey.2 page(s
To perceive the visual world as three-dimensional, the brain has to reconstruct spatial structure fr...
Sighted animals must survive in an environment that is diverse yet highly structured. Neural-coding ...
A central function of vision is determining the layout and size of objects in the visual field, both...