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      Bees can touch but not look

      Nature Reviews Neuroscience
      Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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          Bumble bees display cross-modal object recognition between visual and tactile senses

          Many animals can associate object shapes with incentives. However, such behavior is possible without storing images of shapes in memory that are accessible to more than one sensory modality. One way to explore whether there are modality-independent internal representations of object shapes is to investigate cross-modal recognition—experiencing an object in one sensory modality and later recognizing it in another. We show that bumble bees trained to discriminate two differently shaped objects (cubes and spheres) using only touch (in darkness) or vision (in light, but barred from touching the objects) could subsequently discriminate those same objects using only the other sensory information. Our experiments demonstrate that bumble bees possess the ability to integrate sensory information in a way that requires modality-independent internal representations.
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            Author and article information

            Journal
            Nature Reviews Neuroscience
            Nat Rev Neurosci
            Springer Science and Business Media LLC
            1471-003X
            1471-0048
            April 2 2020
            Article
            10.1038/s41583-020-0297-z
            0f625609-6247-4e87-9e4d-2f97e268c078
            © 2020

            Free to read

            http://www.springer.com/tdm

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