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      The ecology and evolution of visual pollen signals

      Plant Systematics and Evolution
      Springer Nature

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          Most cited references66

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          Population Size, Pollinator Limitation, and Seed Set in the Self- Incompatible Herb Lythrum Salicaria

          Jon Ågren (1996)
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            Symmetry perception in an insect.

            Symmetrical visual patterns have a salient status in human perception, as evinced by their prevalent occurrence in art, and also in animal perception, where they may be an indicator of phenotypic and genotypic quality. Symmetry perception has been demonstrated in humans, birds, dolphins and apes. Here we show that bees trained to discriminate bilaterally symmetrical from non-symmetrical patterns learn the task and transfer it appropriately to novel stimuli, thus demonstrating a capacity to detect and generalize symmetry or asymmetry. We conclude that bees, and possibly flower-visiting insects in general, can acquire a generalized preference towards symmetrical or, alternatively, asymmetrical patterns depending on experience, and that symmetry detection is preformed or can be learned as perceptual category by insects, because it can be extracted as an independent visual pattern feature. Bees show a predisposition for learning and generalized symmetry because, if trained to it, they choose it more frequently, come closer to and hover longer in front of the novel symmetrical stimuli than the bees trained for asymmetry do for the novel asymmetrical stimuli. Thus, even organisms with comparatively small nervous systems can generalize about symmetry, and favour symmetrical over asymmetrical patterns.
              • Record: found
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              Insect Reproduction and Floral Fragrances: Keys to the Evolution of the Angiosperms?

                Author and article information

                Journal
                Plant Systematics and Evolution
                Pl Syst Evol
                Springer Nature
                0378-2697
                1615-6110
                2000
                2000
                : 222
                : 1-4
                : 89-111
                Article
                10.1007/BF00984097
                31870286-98af-409d-b8dd-9ffce673373a
                © 2000
                History

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