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Through the eyes of a bee: seeing the world as a whole

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 01:24 authored by Adrian Dyer, Scarlett Howard, Jair Eduardo Garcia Mendoza
Honeybees are an important model species for understanding animal vision as free-flying individuals can be easily trained by researchers to collect nutrition from novel visual stimuli and thus learn visual tasks. A leading question in animal vision is whether it is possible to perceive all information within a scene, or if only elemental cues are perceived driven by the visual system and supporting neural mechanisms. In human vision we often process the global content of a scene, and prefer such information to local elemental features. Here we discuss recent evidence from studies on honeybees which demonstrate a preference for global information. We explore insights from imaging studies suggesting why a global preference may be important for foraging in natural environments where a holistic representation of elemental factors is advantageous. Thus we aim to provide a brief new insight into how animal vision may perceive the complex world in which we must all operate and suggest further ways to test this.

History

Journal

Animal Studies Journal

Volume

5

Number

7

Issue

1

Start page

97

End page

109

Total pages

13

Publisher

Australian Animal Studies Group

Place published

Australia

Language

English

Former Identifier

2006066487

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2016-09-19

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