Fruit flies found to move their retinas, instead of moving their eyes

By A Mystery Man Writer

Fruit flies differ from us in a great many ways, including the fact that they can't move their eyes relative to the rest of their head. That's not a problem, however, as new research shows that they move their retinas within their unmoving eyes instead.

Ghosts in the machine: The neural basis of visual illusions in fruit flies

Fruit flies move their retinas much like humans move their eyes

Flies evade your swatting thanks to sophisticated vision and neural shortcuts

Eye Floaters: Am I Imagining Worms Floating in my Vision?

Live Imaging Reveals How Cells of Developing Fruit Fly Eye Move Into Position

Understanding Fish Vision - In-Fisherman

Head of the blowfly Calliphora erythrocephala with its panoramic

DARWIN EYE CONSULTANTS

The Fly Point of View - Rove Pest Control

Man's Eye Infested With Over a Dozen Fly Maggots While Gardening

Eye Floaters: Causes & How to Get Rid of Them for Good

What Virtual Reality for Flies Teaches Us About Human Vision

Muscles that move the retina augment compound eye vision in Drosophila

Fruit Flies

Fruit Flies

©2016-2024, sincikhaber.net, Inc. or its affiliates