Title: When do honey bees use snapshots during navigation?
1When do honey bees use snapshots during
navigation?
Bees and wasps learn information about visual
landmarks near the goal Edge orientation
(Srinivasan et al., 1994) Color (von Frisch,
1967 Cheng et al., 1986) Size (Cartwright
Collett, 1979 Ronacher, 1998) Spatial
relationships among multiple landmarks
(Cartwright Collett, 1983) How is this
information subsequently used over successive
visits? Snapshot template matching (Cartwright
Collett, 1983)
2What is snapshot navigation?
3Experiments revealing the contents of snapshot
memories
-- When a single landmark is present bees rely
on retinal image size. -- When multiple
landmarks are available bees rely on the
inter-landmark angles (or the spaces between
landmarks)
4Testing the snapshot hypothesis in a small scale
arena environment
- The snapshot hypothesis makes accurate
predictions about where insects should spend
their time searching for the goal. - Can we replicate these findings?
- The hypothesis also generates predictions of
flight paths to the goal from more distant
locations. - Do steering commands generated by snapshot
matching predict honey bee flight behavior while
en-route to a familiar goal? - This has not been tested explicitly.
5Methods
Training bees visit an initial landmark
configuration (60 visits) Testing track with
original configuration and other landmark
manipulations The camera records bee position
and body axis orientation at 60 Hz.
6Search distributions
-- When a single landmark is present bees rely
on retinal image size. -- When multiple
landmarks are available bees rely on the
inter-landmark angles -- These results are
consistent with previous studies
7Flight paths to the goal location
The model predictions were generated in Matlab
based on the algorithm provided by Cartwright
Collett (1983)
Bees appear to be attracted to the nearest
landmark and use it as a beacon even over very
short distances
8Conclusions
- Search at the goal
- Consistent with previous findings
- Steering from more remote locations using
template matching - Bee flights not consistent with model predictions
- Strong role of beacons
- Consistent with other results (Fry Wehner,
2005 Collett Baron, 1994) but extended to
shorter distances and more complex arrays - Beacon selection probably driven by visual
salience
9Acknowledgments
- Yoav Littman
- Jenny Jones
- Lora Bramlett
- Kourtney Trudgen
- Lauren Davenport
- NSF IGERT
- Fred Dyer
- Steven Fry
- Mike Mack
- Chris Speilburg
10Short range visual navigation in flying
hymenopterans
- Bees and wasp learn information about visual
landmarks near the goal - Edge orientation (Srinivasan et al. 1994)
- Color (von Frisch, 1967 Cheng et al., 1986)
- Size (Cartwright Collett, 1979 Ronacher, 1998)
- Spatial relationships among multiple landmarks
(Cartwright Collett 1983) - How is this information represented and
subsequently used over successive visits? - Snapshot template matching (Cartrwright
Collett 1983)
11How is this information learned?The
turn-back-and-look
--Motion parallax cues allow bees to distinguish
nearby landmarks from distant landmarks (Lehrer,
1993)
--Believed to aid in the selection and learning
of the landmarks near a goal
12What is snapshot navigation?
-- Insect visual memory is thought to be
comprised of a two dimensional snapshot that
encodes the retinotopic sizes and positions of
landmarks and the gaps between them.
13Model predictions vs. Flight Behaviorpushed off
course
After their course is diverted by the novel
landmark, bees again use the next nearest
landmark as a beacon to guide flight.
14Finding the match
- Near the goal bees prefer to maintain a southern
facing body axis - Snapshot is probably anchored to the retina
(Collett Baron, 1994) - Bees perform bouts of lateral flight during their
return to the goal - Probably to help bring their memory into register
with their current view (Collett Reese, 1997)
15Model predictions vs. flight Behaviormiddle
landmark removed
16Model predictions vs. Flight Behaviorfarthest
landmark removed
17Model predictions vs. Flight Behavior removed
nearest landmark
18Fixed body axis and scanning flights
Bees preferred a southern facing body axis
orientation during their first pass through the
goal region
Bees rarely performed lateral scanning flights
near the landmark. Circling flights were the
norm.
19Snapshot overview
- Insects memorize a visual template or snapshot
of landmarks they experience at important
locations of their environment - The memory encodes the sizes and retinal
locations of landmarks - Insects sequentially match this template to the
environment upon return while maintaining
consistent body alignment - Lateral scanning movement may aid the matching
process
20Snapshot overview
- Insects memorize a visual template or snapshot
of landmarks they experience at important
locations of their environment - The memory encodes the sizes and retinal
locations of landmarks - Insects sequentially match this template to the
environment upon return while maintaining
consistent body alignment - Lateral scanning movement may aid the matching
process
21Testing the snapshot hypothesis in a small scale
arena environment
- Honey bee flight behavior during other visual
navigation experiments in our apparatus appeared
inconsistent with snapshot guidance. - Investigated elements of snapshot navigation in a
carefully controlled arena environment - Snapshot predictions of search behavior near the
goal location (tested by Cartwright Collett,
1979, 1982 Cheng, 1999) - Predictions of flights paths to the goal from
distances of up to two meters (largely untested) - Consistent body axis orientation near the goal
(Collett Baron, 1994) - Lateral scanning flights near the goal (Collett
Rees, 1997)