TY - JOUR A1 - Koenig, Sebastian A1 - Wolf, Reinhard A1 - Heisenberg, Martin T1 - Vision in Flies: Measuring the Attention Span JF - PLoS ONE N2 - A visual stimulus at a particular location of the visual field may elicit a behavior while at the same time equally salient stimuli in other parts do not. This property of visual systems is known as selective visual attention (SVA). The animal is said to have a focus of attention (FoA) which it has shifted to a particular location. Visual attention normally involves an attention span at the location to which the FoA has been shifted. Here the attention span is measured in Drosophila. The fly is tethered and hence has its eyes fixed in space. It can shift its FoA internally. This shift is revealed using two simultaneous test stimuli with characteristic responses at their particular locations. In tethered flight a wild type fly keeps its FoA at a certain location for up to 4s. Flies with a mutation in the radish gene, that has been suggested to be involved in attention-like mechanisms, display a reduced attention span of only 1s. KW - eye movements KW - attention KW - Drosophila melanogaster KW - torque KW - motion KW - insect flight KW - eyes KW - vision Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-179947 VL - 11 IS - 2 ER -