Navigating Through an Asymmetrical Brain: Lateralisation and Homing in Pigeons
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Asymmetry of different brain structures in homing pigeons with and without navigational experience.
Homing pigeons (Columba livia f.d.) are well-known for their homing abilities, and their brains seem to be functionally adapted to homing as exemplified, e.g. by their larger hippocampi and olfactory bulbs. Their hippocampus size is influenced by navigational experience, and, as in other birds, functional specialisation of the left and right hemispheres ('lateralisation') occurs in homing pigeo...
متن کاملLeft-hemispheric superiority for visuospatial orientation in homing pigeons.
To test for lateralisation of visuospatial orientation during homing, pigeons who had binocularly learned the homeward route from remote release sites were tested monocularly on either their left or their right eye for homing performance. In two experiments with three different release sites, birds using their right eye showed considerably better homing performance. If sun compass information w...
متن کاملEvidence for perceptual neglect of environmental features in hippocampal-lesioned pigeons during homing.
The importance of the vertebrate hippocampus in spatial cognition is often related to its broad role in memory. However, in birds, the hippocampus appears to be more specifically involved in spatial processes. The maturing of GPS-tracking technology has enabled a revolution in navigation research, including the expanded possibility of studying brain mechanisms that guide navigation in the field...
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Depriving homing pigeons of olfactory information by spraying an 18% zinc sulphate solution onto their olfactory ephithelium results in anosmia that persists for at least 5 days (tested using the ‘orienting response’). To study whether anosmic zinc-sulphate-treated pigeons (ZnSO4-pigeons) were able to compensate for their loss of olfactory information by using familiar landmarks, we made releas...
متن کاملpigeon Columba liÕia and their potential role in brain lateralisation
In pigeons, visual object processing is lateralised with a dominance of the left tectofugal system. To test the hypothesis, that avian visual lateralisation may arise, at least in part, from asymmetric interhemispheric inhibition, the intertectal modulation was quantified in 19 pigeons. Field potentials were recorded from intratectal electrodes in response to a stroboscope flash to the contrala...
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تاریخ انتشار 2013