Eric Warrant
Titel
professor
Organisation
046-2229341
+46704964927
Eric [dot] Warrant [at] biol [dot] lu [dot] se
Publikationer (hämtat ur Lunds universitets publikationsdatabas)
författare
- 2013
- 2012
- A Unique Advantage for Giant Eyes in Giant Squid.
- A novel method for comparative analysis of retinal specialization traits from topographic maps
- Dung beetles ignore landmarks for straight-line orientation
- Dung beetles use their dung ball as a mobile thermal refuge
- Nocturnal homing: learning walks in a wandering spider?
- The dung beetle dance: an orientation behaviour?
- 2011
- Biologically inspired enhancement of dim light video
- Hornets Can Fly at Night without Obvious Adaptations of Eyes and Ocelli.
- How dim is dim? Precision of the celestial compass in moonlight and sunlight.
- Nocturnal insects use optic flow for flight control.
- Ocellar adaptations for dim light vision in a nocturnal bee
- Spectral sensitivity of a colour changing spider
- The organization of honeybee ocelli: Regional specializations and rhabdom arrangements
- Vision and Visual Navigation in Nocturnal Insects.
- 2010
- Bearing selection in ball-rolling dung beetles: is it constant?
- Comparative visual function in four piscivorous fishes inhabiting Chesapeake Bay
- Polarisation Vision: Beetles See Circularly Polarised Light.
- Visual Orientation and Navigation in Nocturnal Arthropods.
- Wide-field motion tuning in nocturnal hawkmoths
- 2009
- Lens optical properties in the eyes of large marine predatory teleosts.
- Mammalian vision: rods are a bargain.
- Optimum spatiotemporal receptive fields for vision in dim light
- Resolution and sensitivity of the eyes of the Asian honeybees Apis florea, Apis cerana and Apis dorsata.
- Visual acuity and sensitivity increase allometrically with body size in butterflies
- Visual ecology of Indian carpenter bees II: adaptations of eyes and ocelli to nocturnal and diurnal lifestyles.
- 2008
- Comparative visual function in five sciaenid fishes inhabiting Chesapeake Bay
- Nocturnal bees learn landmark colours in starlight.
- Seeing in the dark: vision and visual behaviour in nocturnal bees and wasps.
- The optical sensitivity of compound eyes: theory and experiment compared.
- Visual ecology of Indian carpenter bees I: Light intensities and flight activity.
- Visual reliability and information rate in the retina of a nocturnal bee.
- Visual sensitivity in the crepuscular owl butterfly Caligo memnon and the diurnal blue morpho Morpho peleides: a clue to explain the evolution of nocturnal apposition eyes?
- 2007
- Adaptations for vision in dim light: impulse responses and bumps in nocturnal spider photoreceptor cells (Cupiennius salei Keys)
- Anatomical and physiological evidence for polarisation vision in the nocturnal bee Megalopta genalis
- Djurögon: ekologiskt anpassad optik.
- Flight performance in night-flying sweat bees suffers at low light levels.
- Form vision in the insect dorsal ocelli: An anatomical and optical analysis of the Locust Ocelli
- Form vision in the insect dorsal ocelli: An anatomical and optical analysis of the dragonfly median ocellus
- Form vision in the insect dorsal ocelli: An anatomical and optical analysis of the dragonfly median ocellus.
- Form vision in the insect dorsal ocelli: An anatomical and optical analysis of the locust ocelli.
- Light scattering by selected zooplankton from the Gulf of Aqaba.
- Nocturnal bees
- Ommatidial adaptations for spatial, spectral and polarisation vision in arthropods.
- The eyes of Macrosoma sp. (Lepidoptera: Hedyloidea): a nocturnal butterfly with superposition optics.
- Visual ecology: Hiding in the dark.
- 2006
- A 'bright zone' in male hoverfly (Eristalis tenax) eyes and associated faster motion detection and increased contrast sensitivity
- Celestial polarization patterns during twilight
- Crepuscular and nocturnal illumination and its effects on color perception by the nocturnal hawkmoth Deilephila elpenor
- Differences in the capabilities of sea turtles and blue water fishes – implications for bycatch reduction.
- Eric Warrant
- Light intensity limits the foraging activity in nocturnal and crepuscular bees.
- Motion dependent spatiotemporal smoothing for noise reduction in very dim light image sequences
- Ocellar optics in nocturnal and diurnal bees and wasps
- The best of a bad situation.
- The sensitivity of invertebrate eyes to light.
- Visual summation in night-flying sweat bees: A theoretical study
- Visual training improves underwater vision in children
- 2005
- A neural network to improve dim-light vision? Dendritic fields of first-order interneurons in the nocturnal bee Megalopta genalis
- Bigeye Tuna behavior and physiology. Their relevance to stock assessments and fishery biology.
- Polarization patterns of the twilight sky.
- The effect of ocular heating on vision in swordfishes.
- Warm eyes provide superior vision in swordfishes
- 2004
- Do tuna and billfish see colours?
- Lunar orientation in a beetle
- Neural organisation in the first optic ganglion of the nocturnal bee Megalopta genalis
- Nocturnal vision and landmark orientation in a tropical halictid bee
- Retinal and optical adaptations for nocturnal vision in the halictid bee Megalopta genalis
- Vision in the deep sea
- Vision in the dimmest habitats on Earth
- 2003
- A dinner dance.
- Colour vision in diurnal and nocturnal hawkmoths
- Eye design and vision in deep- sea fishes.
- Eyes and vision.
- Insect orientation to polarized moonlight
- Retinal specializations in the blue marlin: eyes designed for sensitivity to low light levels
- Superior underwater vision in a human population of sea gypsies
- The physical designs of animal eyes: optics in the service of ecology.
- Visual cues used by ball-rolling dung beetles for orientation
- 2002
- A specialized dorsal rim area for polarized light detection in the compound eye of the scarab beetle Pachysoma striatum.
- Scotopic colour vision in nocturnal hawkmoths
- Visual field structure in the Empress Leilia, Asterocampa leilia (Lepidoptera, Nymphalidae): dimensions and regional variation in acuity

