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Experimental psychologists working with humans have a fundamental advantage over
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scientists studying the behaviour of other animals. This is because human subjects can give
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a verbal account of their experience. For example, they can report: ‘These two lights of
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different colour look equally bright’ or ‘This object looks further away than that one’.
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Such direct reports facilitate studying how information from the sensory periphery, that
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is, the sense organs that actually interface with the environment, is processed in the
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brain.
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The perceptual world of animals is often very different from that of humans. Many
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animals have sensory facilities that we humans lack; for example, insects can see
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ultraviolet and polarised light. But how they actually perceive the world, based on
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information from their sensory periphery, is often beyond our grasp. Because animals cannot
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describe their sensations, our access to them is often based on indirect psychophysical
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tests, where animal performance depends fundamentally on motivation and training method
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(Chittka et al. 2003). However, some animals do in fact describe the world around them, but
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not necessarily in ways that we might intuitively understand. Perhaps the best example of
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this are the honeybees (genus
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Apis ), which have a symbolic ‘language’ that nestmates use to
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communicate with each other about profitable food sources. By eavesdropping on this
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communication, scientists have recently obtained a unique perspective into the perceptual
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world of insects.
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How does the dance language work? A triumphant scout bee returns from the field, and
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advertises the location of a newly discovered food source to nestmates. To do this, the
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forager performs a repetitive sequence of movements, the so-called waggle dance, which is
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one of the most intriguing examples of complex animal behaviour. The successful forager
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wiggles her abdomen provocatively from side to side, moving forward in a straight line.
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Then she runs in a half circle to the left, back to her starting point, performs another
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straight wiggle run along the path of her first, and then circles to the right (Figure 1).
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This pattern is repeated multiple times, and is eagerly attended by unemployed bees in the
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hive. Shortly after such dances commence, dozens of newly recruited foragers arrive at the
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food source being advertised.
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In the 1940s, Nobel laureate Karl von Frisch deciphered the code hidden in this
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seemingly senseless choreography performed on vertical honeycombs in the darkness of the
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hive (reviewed in von Frisch 1967). He found that the angle of the waggle run from the
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vertical is equal to the angle between the sun's azimuth and the indicated food source
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outside the hive. For example, if a food source is found in the direction of the sun, the
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dancer will waggle ‘straight up’ the vertical comb. If food is found 45° to the right of
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the sun's direction, the waggle run will be oriented 45° to the right of vertical on the
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comb (Figure 1). The distance to the target, a flower patch with abundant nectar or pollen,
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is encoded in the duration of the waggle run: the longer the bee waggles, the larger the
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distance of the food from the hive. No other species (besides humans) uses a similarly
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symbolic representation to communicate information from the real world.
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But how do bees measure the flight distance that they communicate so precisely? It was
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previously thought they do this by measuring the energy used as they fly (Heran 1956).
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However, doubts emerged when it was found that distance estimation by bees could be
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manipulated by altering the number of landmarks between the hive and a food source,
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suggesting bees were counting landmarks encountered en route (Chittka and Geiger 1995). In
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an elegant experiment, Esch and Burns (1995) tapped into the bees' dance language to access
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their subjective assessment of flight distance. They let bees forage from a food source 70
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m from the hive and recorded the dance distance code of the returning foragers.
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Subsequently, the feeder was attached to a weather balloon, and slowly lifted to an
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altitude of 90 m—so that the distance between the hive and the food now increased from 70 m
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to 114 m. Correspondingly, foragers should have indicated a longer distance, by stretching
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their waggle run duration. But, in fact, the perceived distance (as indicated in the dance)
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decreased by more than 50%! This clearly shows that bee perception of
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distance cannot solely be based on energy expenditure, since a longer flight that cost more
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energy was danced as a shorter ‘distance’ in the waggle run.
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So what actually drives the bee odometer? Because the landscape bees pass in flight
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moves more slowly when bees fly at higher altitudes, Esch and Burns (1995) conjectured that
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foragers process the speed with which visual contours move across the eye (optic flow), and
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integrate this with travel time. To confirm this hypothesis, Srinivasan et al. (2000)
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further exaggerated the experienced image flow, by training bees to fly through narrow
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chequered tunnels. These bees grossly overestimated actual travel distance, bragging to
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their nestmates that they had flown 195 m when in fact they had flown 6 m. Attendees of
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these dances promptly believed the high-class swindle, and searched for food at remote
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locations that the dancers had never even visited (Esch et al. 2001).
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The quality of information available about the velocity of the passing landscape will
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depend, of course, on the sensitivity of the eyes. The eyes of bees contain three types of
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colour receptors, with maximum sensitivity in the ultraviolet, blue, and green domains of
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the spectrum (Autrum and von Zwehl 1964). Their excellent colour vision is optimal for
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flower identification (Chittka 1996), but do they also use it to measure the image velocity
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of the passing landscape? Surprisingly, the answer is no—bee odometry is in fact totally
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colour blind. Chittka and Tautz (2003) found that bees use exclusively the signal from
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their green receptors for measuring image velocity (Figure 2), confirming earlier reports
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that motion vision in bees is mediated only by this receptor type (Giurfa and Lehrer 2001;
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Spaethe et al. 2001). Thus, the level of intensity contrast present in the scene strongly
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influences the bees' subjective experience of flight distance (Chittka and Tautz 2003; Si
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et al. 2003).
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With so many external variables influencing distance estimation, it seems unlikely that
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the honeybee odometer would be very robust in natural conditions. Now, as reported in this
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issue of
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PLoS Biology , Tautz et al. (2004) have quantified the bees' subjective
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experience of distance travelled when they fly over natural terrain with varying levels of
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contrast. Specifically, they compared the dances of bees flying over water (scenery with
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low visual contrast) with those of bees flying over land (scenery with relatively high
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contrast). They trained bees to forage at a feeder on a boat, which was paddled increasing
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distances from the hive, until it reached an island. All the while, observers at the hive
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deciphered the dances of the bees returning from the feeder. Interestingly, bees flying 200
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m over water hardly appeared to register an increase in travel distance, whereas the same
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increase in distance flown over land resulted in a substantial increase in perceived flight
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distance. This is consistent with the hypothesis that the bees' odometer is largely based
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on visual, external cues and demonstrates that this system is sensitive to visual
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contrast.
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But there must be something else beside visual cues. Navigation over water, in the near
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absence of visible ground features, is extremely difficult without a reliable internal
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instrument measuring travel speed. This is the case even for us humans with sophisticated
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measuring devices: malfunctioning air speed indicators have been responsible for several
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airplane crashes into water, for example Birgenair Flight 301 and AeroPeru Flight 603 in
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1996. Heran and Lindauer (1963) likewise observed that honeybees flying over lakes
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sometimes lost altitude and plunged into the water. However, the new study by Tautz et al.
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(2004) also shows that most bees will reliably fly over prolonged stretches of water
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without accident. Furthermore, even though bees experience only a small increase in
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subjective travel distance when flying over water, it is not zero. This indicates that bees
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do perhaps resort to an internal measure of flight distance when other cues fail. For
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example, bumblebees walking to a food source in absolute darkness, that is, in the complete
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absence of visual cues, are able to correctly gauge travel distance (Chittka et al. 1999),
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indicating that an internal odometer, possibly based on energy consumption, also exists. It
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appears that animal navigation, just like aviation, relies on multiple backup systems that
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support each other and can compensate if one system fails in a certain context.
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Spying on honeybee dances can not only tell us about the cues they use for navigation,
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but also allows insights into the cognitive architecture that governs other aspects of bee
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behaviour, such as the assessment of flower quality. We've learned that bees prefer high
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over low nectar concentrations because this is reflected in their dances. When bees find
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better nectar, they dance more enthusiastically, that is, the number of dance circuits per
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minute increases (Seeley et al. 2000; Waddington 2001). However, Waddington (2001) found
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that the relationship between actual and perceived nectar quality is nonlinear. In fact, it
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is a positive but decelerating relationship, so that an increase in sucrose concentration
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from 10% to 20% results in twice the difference in dance rate that an increase from 50% to
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60% does. Interestingly, the perceived change in quality is stronger when there is a
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decrease than when there is an
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increase in nectar quality of the same magnitude. Such asymmetric
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perception of gains and losses is well known in humans, where it has been linked to
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risk-aversive behaviour (Tversky and Kahnemann 1981). Unfortunately, animal subjects often
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do not yield this type of information very readily. Only in their own language do they
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reveal many of their perceptual peculiarities. Using the bee language as a window into
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insect visual perception has been a wonderful tool and is a promising avenue for further
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research into the question of how miniature brains encode the world around them.
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