542 research outputs found

    Seeing red by accident?

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    The spectral input to honeybee visual odometry

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    Information flow and regulation of foraging activity in bumble bees (Bombus spp.)

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    Publisher version: http://www.apidologie.org

    Limits to the salience of ultraviolet: Lessons from colour vision in bees and birds

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    Publisher version: http://jeb.biologists.org/content/204/14/2571/F1.expansio

    Colouration in crab spiders: substrate choice and prey attraction

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    Published version: http://jeb.biologists.org/content/208/10/1785/F3.expansio

    A failed invasion? Commercially introduced pollinators in Southern France

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    The natural diversity of Bombus terrestris subspecies could be under threat from the commercialisation of bumblebees. Therefore, to determine whether commercially imported bumblebees are able to establish and spread, we carried out long-term observations of bumblebees in southern France. Our surveys occurred before, during, and after the importation (between 1989 and 1996) of thousands of colonies of the Sardinian subspecies B. t. sassaricus. Queens and males of B. t. sassaricus were observed foraging outside commercial greenhouses in 1991, 1993, and 1994 and feral workers were observed foraging on native vegetation nearly two years after the importation of B. t. sassaricus ceased. However, no B. t. sassaricus, or F1 hybrids were observed after 1998. We conclude that B. t. sassaricus remains inconspicuous in France and competition from the three native subspecies may have prevented it from becoming invasive. However, genetic interference through introgression cannot be ruled out

    False memory susceptibility is correlated with categorisation ability in humans.

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    Our memory is often surprisingly inaccurate, with errors ranging from misremembering minor details of events to generating illusory memories of entire episodes. The pervasiveness of such false memories generates a puzzle: in the face of selection pressure for accuracy of memory, how could such systematic failures have persisted over evolutionary time? It is possible that memory errors are an inevitable by-product of our adaptive memories and that semantic false memories are specifically connected to our ability to learn rules and concepts and to classify objects by category memberships. Here we test this possibility using a standard experimental false memory paradigm and inter-individual variation in verbal categorisation ability. Indeed it turns out that the error scores are significantly negatively correlated, with those individuals scoring fewer errors on the categorisation test being more susceptible to false memory intrusions in a free recall test. A similar trend, though not significant, was observed between individual categorisation ability and false memory susceptibility in a word recognition task. Our results therefore indicate that false memories, to some extent, might be a by-product of our ability to learn rules, categories and concepts.This work was funded as part of a PhD studentship provided by the Natural Environment Research Council (NE/H525089/1)
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