Rossel S
Institut für Biologie I, Universität Freiburg, Albertstrasse 21a, 79104 Freiburg, Germany.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1996 Nov 12;93(23):13229-32. doi: 10.1073/pnas.93.23.13229.
Praying mantids use binocular cues to judge whether their prey is in striking distance. When there are several moving targets within their binocular visual field, mantids need to solve the correspondence problem. They must select between the possible pairings of retinal images in the two eyes so that they can strike at a single real target. In this study, mantids were presented with two targets in various configurations, and the resulting fixating saccades that precede the strike were analyzed. The distributions of saccades show that mantids consistently prefer one out of several possible matches. Selection is in part guided by the position and the spatiotemporal features of the target image in each eye. Selection also depends upon the binocular disparity of the images, suggesting that insects can perform local binocular computations. The pairing rules ensure that mantids tend to aim at real targets and not at "ghost" targets arising from false matches.
螳螂利用双眼线索来判断其猎物是否在可攻击范围内。当在它们的双眼视野中有多个移动目标时,螳螂需要解决对应问题。它们必须在两眼视网膜图像的可能配对之间进行选择,以便能够攻击单个真实目标。在本研究中,给螳螂呈现了处于各种配置的两个目标,并对攻击前产生的注视性扫视进行了分析。扫视的分布表明,螳螂始终偏好几种可能匹配中的一种。选择部分受每只眼中目标图像的位置和时空特征引导。选择还取决于图像的双眼视差,这表明昆虫能够进行局部双眼计算。配对规则确保螳螂倾向于瞄准真实目标,而不是由错误匹配产生的“重影”目标。