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Associate Professor Adrian Dyer

Adrian Dyer is a vision scientist and photographer seeking to understand how the representation of an image is created, and can be used to interpret the complex world in which we live. interests centre on understanding how visual systems learn perceptually difficult tasks. This work involves both using human psychophysics and imaging studies, as well as experimenting with how the miniature brain of a bee can form visual representations to make decisions in complex environments. interests

Colour visual processing by honeybees: solutions for decision making in complex environments (DP0878968) is a collaboration with Professor Marcello Rosa.

Project summary: Honeybees are a cost and time efficient animal model for testing how information is processed in a miniature brain containing less than 0.01% of the number of cells found in a human brain. Bees use their ultraviolet, blue and green colour vision to efficiently find flowers in complex environments. This project investigates how colour information is processed by bees, and develops computer models to evaluate how novel solutions might be applicable for robotic vision. The model also allows for testing of how environmental factors, like changes in climate, might affect the way in which bees choose to visit certain flower types, including plants that have important environmental and economic impacts.

Organization and plasticity of visual processing in a miniature brain (DP0987989) is a collaboration with Dr David Reser.

Project summary: To recognise objects a brain must have an internal representation of most likely object appearance. Two ways in which brains may posses this information include a hard wired template system, and/or the neuroplasticity to learn novel objects. Recent investigations on honeybee vision show that this animal can learn to recognise very difficult objects, although currently we do not know how the miniaturised bee brain manages these tasks. This project will reveal changes that occur in the processing of visual objects by the bee brain with increasing experience, with potential applications including robotics or building interfaces between sensors and biological systems.

Batty, C.,Dyer, A.,Perkins, C.,Sita, J. (2016). Seeing animated worlds: Eye tracking and the spectator's experience of narrative In: Making Sense of Cinema: Empirical Studies into Film Spectators and Spectatorship, Bloomsbury Publishers, New York, United StatesDyer, A. (2016). Seeing through a bees' eye: how do pollinators finds flowers in complex environments? In: Unlikely: Journal of the Centre for Creative Arts, 1, 1 10Shrestha, M.,Lunau, K.,Dorin, A.,Schulze, B.,Bischoff, M.,Burd, M.,Dyer, A. (2016). Floral colours in a world without birds and bees: the plants of Macquarie Island In: Plant Biology, 18, 842 850Dyer, A.,copy cartier santos 100,Howard, S.,Garcia Mendoza, J. (2016). Through the eyes of a bee: seeing the world as a whole In: Animal Studies Journal, 5, 97 109Dyer, A.,Streinzer, M.,Garcia Mendoza, J. (2016). Flower detection and acuity of the Australian native stingless bee Tetragonula carbonaria Sm. In: Journal of Comparative Physiology A: Neuroethology, Sensory, Neural, and Behavioral Physiology, 202, 629 639Koethe,calibre de cartier chronograph fake, S.,Bossems, J.,Dyer, A.,Lunau, K. (2016). Colour is more than hue: preferences for compiled colour traits in the stingless bees Melipona mondury and M. quadrifasciata In: Journal of Comparative Physiology A: Neuroethology, Sensory, Neural, and Behavioral Physiology, 202, 615 627de Brito Sanchez, M.,Serre, M.,Avargues Weber, A.,Dyer, A.,Giurfa, M. (2015). Learning context modulates aversive taste strength in honey bees In: The Journal of Experimental Biology, 218, 949 959Avargues Weber, A.,Dyer, A.,Ferrah, N.,Giurfa, M. (2015). The forest or the trees: Preference for global over local image processing is reversed by prior experience in honeybees In: Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 282, 1 9van der Kooi, C.,replica ballon bleu cartier watch,Dyer, A.,Stavenga, D. (2015). Is floral iridescence a biologically relevant cue in plant pollinator signaling? In: New Phytologist, 205, 18 20Garcia Mendoza,fake cartier de calibre, J.,Dyer, A. (2015). UV digital imaging: new perspectives for quantitative data analysis in forensics In: Forensic science : new developments, perspectives and advanced technologies, Nova Science Publishers Inc, New York, United States

Designing green spaces for biodiversity and human well being. Administered by Monash University. Administered by University of Oslo. Administered by Monash University. Administered by Monash University.

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