To detect and avoid collisions, animals need to perceive and control the distance and the speed with which they are moving relative to obstacles. This is especially challenging for swimming and flying animals that must control movement in a dynamic fluid without reference from physical contact to the ground. Flying animals primarily rely on optic flow to control flight speed and distance to obstacles. Here, we investigate whether swimming animals use similar strategies for self-motion control to flying animals by directly comparing the trajectories of zebrafish (Danio rerio) and bumblebees (Bombus terrestris) moving through the same experimental tunnel. While moving through the tunnel, black and white patterns produced (i) strong horizontal...
In this work, we explore the feasibility of regulating the collective behavior of zebrafish with a f...
<div><p>In this work, we explore the feasibility of regulating the collective behavior of zebrafish ...
International audienceLocomotion exists in diverse forms in nature; however, little is known about h...
Animals benefit from knowing if and how they are moving. Across the animal kingdom, sensory informat...
When flying or swimming, animals must adjust their own movement to compensate for displacements indu...
Understanding how animals navigate complex environments is a fundamental challenge in biology and a ...
Flying animals are capable of navigating through environments of different complexity with high prec...
The optomotor response (OMR) is central to the locomotory behavior in diverse animal species includi...
Biological motion (BM), depicted by a handful of point lights attached to the major joints, conveys ...
Biological motion (BM), depicted by a handful of point lights attached to the major joints, conveys ...
Flight through cluttered environments, such as forests, poses great challenges for animals and machi...
Fishes suspended in water are subject to the complex nature of three dimensional flows. Often, these...
Prey capture behavior critically depends on rapid processing of sensory input in order to track, app...
Vertebrate locomotion at different speeds is driven by descending excitatory connections to central ...
When flying through narrow spaces, insects control their position by balancing the magnitude of appa...
In this work, we explore the feasibility of regulating the collective behavior of zebrafish with a f...
<div><p>In this work, we explore the feasibility of regulating the collective behavior of zebrafish ...
International audienceLocomotion exists in diverse forms in nature; however, little is known about h...
Animals benefit from knowing if and how they are moving. Across the animal kingdom, sensory informat...
When flying or swimming, animals must adjust their own movement to compensate for displacements indu...
Understanding how animals navigate complex environments is a fundamental challenge in biology and a ...
Flying animals are capable of navigating through environments of different complexity with high prec...
The optomotor response (OMR) is central to the locomotory behavior in diverse animal species includi...
Biological motion (BM), depicted by a handful of point lights attached to the major joints, conveys ...
Biological motion (BM), depicted by a handful of point lights attached to the major joints, conveys ...
Flight through cluttered environments, such as forests, poses great challenges for animals and machi...
Fishes suspended in water are subject to the complex nature of three dimensional flows. Often, these...
Prey capture behavior critically depends on rapid processing of sensory input in order to track, app...
Vertebrate locomotion at different speeds is driven by descending excitatory connections to central ...
When flying through narrow spaces, insects control their position by balancing the magnitude of appa...
In this work, we explore the feasibility of regulating the collective behavior of zebrafish with a f...
<div><p>In this work, we explore the feasibility of regulating the collective behavior of zebrafish ...
International audienceLocomotion exists in diverse forms in nature; however, little is known about h...