PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Need for speed: How hummingbirds switch mental gears in flight

Need for speed: How hummingbirds switch mental gears in flight
2024-01-10
(Press-News.org) Hummingbirds use two distinct sensory strategies to control their flight, depending on whether they’re hovering or in forward motion, according to new research by University of British Columbia (UBC) zoologists. 

“When in forward fight, hummingbirds rely on what we call an ‘internal forward model’—almost an ingrained, intuitive autopilot—to gauge speed,” says Dr. Vikram B. Baliga, lead author of a new study on hummingbird locomotion published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B. “There’s just too much information coming in to rely directly on every visual cue from your surroundings.” 

“But when hovering or dealing with cues that might require a change in altitude, we found they rely much more on real-time, direct visual feedback from their environment.”

The findings not only provide insights on how the tiny, agile birds perceive the world during transitions in flight, but could inform the programming of onboard navigation for next generation autonomous flying and hovering vehicles.

Hummingbird flight recorder The researchers had hummingbirds perform repeated flights from a perch to a feeder in a four-metre tunnel. To test how the birds reacted to a variety of visual stimuli, the team projected patterns on the chamber’s front and side walls. Each flight was videoed.

In some scenarios, the researchers projected vertical stripes moving at various speeds on the side walls to mimic degrees of  forward motion. Sometimes, horizontal stripes on the side mimicked changes in altitude. On the front wall, the researchers projected rotating swirls, designed to create the illusion of a change in position.

“If the birds were taking their cues directly from visual stimuli, we’d expect them to adjust their forward velocity to the speed of vertical stripes on the side walls,” says Dr. Baliga. “But while the birds did change velocity or stop altogether depending on the patterns, there wasn’t a neat correlation.”

However, during flight, the hummingbirds did adjust more directly to stimuli indicating a change in altitude. And during hovering, the birds also worked to adjust their position much more closely to shifting spirals the research team projected on the front wall.

“Our experiments were designed to investigate how hummingbirds control flight speed,” says Dr. Doug Altshuler, senior author on the paper. “But because the hummingbirds took spontaneous breaks to hover during their flights, we uncovered these two distinct strategies to control different aspects of their trajectories.”

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Need for speed: How hummingbirds switch mental gears in flight Need for speed: How hummingbirds switch mental gears in flight 2 Need for speed: How hummingbirds switch mental gears in flight 3

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Wristband monitors provide detailed account of air pollution exposure

2024-01-10
Environmental epidemiologists at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, in collaboration with an interdisciplinary team of researchers at Oregon State University, Pacific Northwest National Labs, and Mt. Sinai School of Medicine, report on the findings of a new study of air pollution exposures collected using personal wristband monitors worn by pregnant individuals in New York City matched with data from a questionnaire. Factors predictive of exposures to air pollution include income, time spent outdoors, maternal age, country of birth, transportation type, and season. The researchers examined an unprecedented number ...

Scaling up urban agriculture: Research team outlines roadmap

Scaling up urban agriculture: Research team outlines roadmap
2024-01-10
URBANA, Ill. — Urban agriculture has the potential to decentralize food supplies, provide environmental benefits like wildlife habitat, and mitigate environmental footprints, but researchers have identified knowledge gaps regarding both the benefits and risks of urban agriculture and the social processes of growing more food in urban areas. In a new paper published in Nature Food, an interdisciplinary group of experts, including a researcher from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, survey ...

Black people face strokes at higher rates, younger ages than white people

2024-01-10
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE UNTIL 4 P.M. ET, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 10, 2024 MINNEAPOLIS – Black people consistently had a higher rate of stroke than white people over a recent 22-year period, according to a study published in the January 10, 2024, online issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. The study also found that the average age of Black people experiencing stroke was nearly 10 years younger than that of white people, another inequity that grew over time. “We found that the rate of stroke is decreasing over time in both Black and white people—a very encouraging trend for U.S. prevention efforts,” said study ...

ASBMB announces 2024 class of fellows

2024-01-10
The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology today announced its 2024 class of fellows. The honorific program recognizes scientists who have made outstanding contributions to the field through their research, teaching, mentoring or other forms of service. Edward Eisenstein, an associate professor of bioengineering at the University of Maryland and ASBMB Membership Committee chair, and Judith Bond, an adjunct professor of biochemistry and biophysics at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and ...

Researchers step closer to mimicking nature’s mastery of chemistry

Researchers step closer to mimicking nature’s mastery of chemistry
2024-01-10
In nature, organic molecules are either left- or right-handed, but synthesizing molecules with a specific “handedness” in a lab is hard to do. Make a drug or enzyme with the wrong “handedness,” and it just won’t work. Now chemists at the University of California, Davis, are getting closer to mimicking nature’s chemical efficiency through computational modeling and physical experimentation.   In a study appearing Jan. 10 in Nature, Professor Dean Tantillo, graduate students William DeSnoo and Croix Laconsay, and colleagues at the Max Planck ...

Dark web fentanyl-selling operations have grown rapidly, offer steep discounts

2024-01-10
Overdose deaths in North America have skyrocketed, primarily because of the spread of illegally manufactured fentanyl. In a new study, researchers analyzed an early and prominent fentanyl-selling operation on the dark web. The organization sustained a significant growth rate, which allowed it to offer consumers steep discounts. In light of these findings, the authors conclude that it might be challenging to constrain supply by shuttering individual organizations since remaining organizations could grow rapidly to fill unmet demand. The study was conducted by researchers at Carnegie ...

Can drinking alkaline water help prevent kidney stones? Not likely, study finds

2024-01-10
Waltham — January 10, 2024 — Bottled water marketed as "alkaline water" is unlikely to be an effective alternative for prevention of recurrent urinary stones, reports a study in the January issue of The Journal of Urology®, an Official Journal of the American Urological Association (AUA). The journal is published in the Lippincott portfolio by Wolters Kluwer.  "While alkaline water products have a higher pH than regular water, they have a negligible alkali content – ...

Tactile lithophane development makes hard scientific data available to students with blindness

Tactile lithophane development makes hard scientific data available to students with blindness
2024-01-10
WACO, Texas (Jan. 10, 2024) – A first-of-its-kind tactile learning device developed by Baylor University chemistry professors to make science accessible to students with blindness or low vision (BLV) has opened the possibility of the transfer of any scientific data or images for sighted students into functional, thorough formats for students with blindness. The study was published today in the journal Science Advances. The latest research from Bryan F. Shaw, Ph.D., professor of chemistry and biochemistry at Baylor, focused on the development of a codex using lithophane – an ancient art form – to convert images from scientific textbooks into tactile ...

Glass packaging with a mix of thermoelectric in the vias

Glass packaging with a mix of thermoelectric in the vias
2024-01-10
Photonics offers various advantages, including enablement of high-speed and low-loss communication by leveraging light properties in optical data communication, biomedical applications, automotive technology, and artificial intelligence domains. These advantages are realized through complex photonic circuits, comprising diverse photonic elements that are integrated on a photonic chip. Electronic chips are then added to supplement the photonic chips for certain functions, such as light source operation, modulation, and amplification. The close integration of electronic and photonic chips on a substrate is a critical aspect of photonic packaging. Photonic packaging plays a vital role in ...

Genetics may influence the body’s response to low oxygen, Pitt study finds

Genetics may influence the body’s response to low oxygen, Pitt study finds
2024-01-10
PITTSBURGH, Jan. 10, 2024 – University of Pittsburgh Schools of Medicine researchers uncovered a fundamental mechanism that controls the body’s response to limited oxygen and regulates blood vessel disease of the lung. By combing through genomes of more than 20,000 individuals in the U.S., France, England and Japan and combining the results with molecular studies in the lab, the team discovered a shared genetic trait that could predict a higher risk of small lung vessel disease called pulmonary hypertension and its more severe ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Scientists discover a hidden RNA “aging clock” in human sperm

New quantum boundary discovered: Spin size determines how the Kondo effect behaves

Ancient ‘spaghetti’ in dogs’ hearts reveals surprising origins of heartworm

Full value added tax on meat: a first step towards pricing the environmental damages caused by diets

Hidden mpox exposure detected in healthy Nigerian adults, revealing under-recognized transmission

Shingles vaccine linked to slower biological aging in older adults

A self-assembling shortcut to better organic solar cells

A two-week leap in breeding: Antarctic penguins’ striking climate adaptation

Climate risks to insurance and reinsurance of global supply chains

58% of patients affected by 2022 mpox outbreak report lasting physical symptoms

Golden Gate method enables rapid, fully-synthetic engineering of therapeutically relevant bacteriophages

Polar weather on Jupiter and Saturn hints at the planets’ interior details

Socio-environmental movements: key global guardians of biodiversity amid rising violence

Global warming and CO2 emissions 56 million years ago resulted in massive forest fires and soil erosion

Hidden order in quantum chaos: the pseudogap

Exploring why adapting to the environment is more difficult as people age

Society for Laboratory Automation and Screening welcomes new scientific director: Madeline M. Farley, Ph.D.

Austrian cow shows first case of flexible, multi-purpose tool use in cattle

Human nasal passages defend against the common cold and help determine how sick we get

Research alert: Spreading drug costs over the year may ease financial burden for Medicare cancer patients

Hospital partnership improves follow up scans, decreases long term risk after aortic repair

Layered hydrogen silicane for safe, lightweight, and energy-efficient hydrogen carrier

Observing positronium beam as a quantum matter wave for the first time

IEEE study investigates the effects of pointing error on quantum key distribution systems

Analyzing submerged fault structures to predict future earthquakes in Türkiye

Quantum ‘alchemy’ made feasible with excitons

‘Revoice’ device gives stroke patients their voice back

USF-led study: AI helps reveal global surge in floating algae

New method predicts asthma attacks up to five years in advance

Researchers publish first ever structural engineering manual for bamboo

[Press-News.org] Need for speed: How hummingbirds switch mental gears in flight