From Living Eyes to Seeing Machines

Front Cover
Mandyam V. Srinivasan, Svethan Venkatesh
OUP Oxford, May 1, 1997 - Technology & Engineering - 288 pages
Many creatures with small brains and simple nervous systems - such as insects - are astonishingly good at coping with the world around them. A fly, for example, can deftly evade a swat, manoeuvre perfectly well in a cluttered world, and execute a flawless landing on the rim of a teacup. Do such creatures use clever short-cuts to vision and navigation, and if so, can these tricks be exploited to create new kinds of robots? These questions are explored in this book, which contains articles by experimental biologists as well as computer scientists, in this newly emerging multidisciplinary field. This is a fresh approach to an area of research that has traditionally been dominated by engineering methods, and the book is written in a style in which technical jargon is kept to a minimum.

From inside the book

Contents

List of contributors
1
A survey of active vision in invertebrates
16
Active acquisition of depth information by honeybees
37
Copyright

10 other sections not shown

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1997)

Mandyam V.SrinivasanProfessor of Visual Sciences; Director of the Australian National University's Centre for Visual ScienceAustralian National University Research School of Biological Sciences.

Bibliographic information