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First published online June 11, 2007
Journal of Experimental Biology 210, 2128-2136 (2007)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2007
doi: 10.1242/jeb.002634
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The co-activation of snapshot memories in wood ants

Paul Graham, Virginie Durier{dagger} and Thomas Collett*

Sussex Centre for Neuroscience, School of Life Sciences, University of Sussex, Brighton, BN1 9QG, UK

* Author for correspondence (e-mail: t.s.collett{at}sussex.ac.uk)

Accepted 2 April 2007

Insects can guide themselves along a familiar route to a familiar place by retrieving and using visual snapshots that they have stored both along the route and at their destination and moving so that their current views match the target snapshots. To learn more about the matching process, we have investigated the interaction of snapshots by engineering a situation in which ants simultaneously retrieve two sets of memories.

Ants were trained from a fixed start position to feed in one site, after which the feeder was switched to a new one. It could take up to 30 trials after the switch before the ants headed directly to the new food site. We suppose that during this transition phase ants retrieve memories appropriate for both sites. We compared the ants' behaviour for two different sized separations between feeder sites. When the sites are relatively close together, the initial headings of the ants' paths rotated gradually from aiming directly at the first food site to aiming at the second food site, suggesting that ants' paths are controlled by the weighted average of two simultaneously activated snapshot attractors. By contrast, when the food sites were further apart, initial headings switched abruptly between the two sites – ants either headed for food site 1 or for food site 2. We show that these differences in transition behaviour can be simulated by the co-activation of snapshot attractors of restricted spatial extent, such that features encoded in a snapshot are only recognised if they occur within a limited retinal distance of the stored position of the feature.

Key words: Image matching, memory recall, navigation, visual landmarks, wood ant


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