Théo Robert, Yi Ting Tan, Dune Ganot, Yi Jie Loh, Vivek Nityananda
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Prior cueing affects the saccadic response to targets in the praying mantis Sphodromantis lineola.
External cues bias human attention and the perception of subsequent targets. Little is known about how cue properties, such as depth, influence insect attention. One robust cue to depth is stereoscopic disparity, which is the difference in the position of an object in the views of the two eyes. Praying mantises are known to use disparity to judge the distance to prey and are therefore ideal insect models to investigate its role in attention. We investigated how three cue properties - position, duration and stereoscopic disparity - affect mantis selective attention towards subsequent targets. We fitted mantises with 3D glasses and presented them with a cue in 2D or 3D, followed by two 3D stimuli: a high-contrast target and a 'distractor' at different contrasts. Our results show that cue position and distractor contrast had the most influence on responses to targets, with no strong effect of disparity. Compared with the 'uncued' condition, cues in two of our disparity conditions reduced target responses if presented on the opposite side of the screen, when the distractor was absent. The cues affected subsequent selective attention even when they did not themselves elicit head saccades, suggesting covert but not overt attention to the cues. Our results show that the position of prior cues can affect mantis selective attention and add further evidence for the complexity of attention-like processes in insects.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Experimental Biology is the leading primary research journal in comparative physiology and publishes papers on the form and function of living organisms at all levels of biological organisation, from the molecular and subcellular to the integrated whole animal.