Discrimination of complex textures by bees

被引:0
|
作者
T. Maddess
M. P. Davey
E. C. Yang
机构
[1] Visual Sciences Group,
[2] Research School of Biological Sciences Australian National University Canberra ACT 0200,undefined
[3] Australia e-mail: ted.maddess@anu.edu.au Tel.: +61-612-62494099; Fax: +61-612-62493808,undefined
[4] Institute of Zoology Academia Sinica Nankang Taipei 11529 Taiwan,undefined
[5] R.O.C.,undefined
来源
Journal of Comparative Physiology A | 1999年 / 184卷
关键词
Key words Bees; Texture; Pattern; Orientation; Iso-dipole;
D O I
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学科分类号
摘要
A problem confronted by visual systems is that of discriminating textures. It appears that a recently described class of orientation-tuned neurones in the bee brain embody properties of mechanisms used by humans to discriminate complex textures. In particular these mechanisms would permit bees to discriminate a large range of textures by giving bees access to information related to higher-order correlations between texture elements. To determine if bees can exploit such textural information we have conducted behavioural experiments employing iso-dipole textures, that statistically speaking, differ from binary noise textures, and each other, only in their third-order correlation functions. While these textures are not themselves of any ethological significance their special properties permit us to show that bees can potentially use a very large palette of textures to classify textured objects. In electrophysiological experiments we demonstrate the requisite contrast sign invariance (rectification) of the orientation-selective neurones' responses and discuss other similarities of these neurones' responses to models accounting for human texture discrimination.
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页码:107 / 117
页数:10
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