Sensory Processing in Aquatic Environments /

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor Corporativo: SpringerLink (Online service)
Otros Autores: Collin, Shaun P. (Editor ), Marshall, N.Justin. (Editor )
Formato: eBook
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: New York, NY : Springer New York : Imprint: Springer, 2003.
Edición:1st ed. 2003.
Materias:
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Navigation and Communication
  • Sound Detection Mechanisms and Capabilities of Teleost Fishes
  • Trails in Open Waters: Sensory Cues in Salmon Migration
  • Detection and Use of the Earth’s Magnetic Field by Aquatic Vertebrates
  • Finding Food and Other Localized Sources
  • Physical Principles of Electric, Magnetic, and Near-Field Acoustic Orientation
  • Active Electrolocation and Its Neural Processing in Mormyrid Electric Fishes
  • Processing of Dipole and More Complex Hydrodynamic Stimuli Under Still- and Running-Water Conditions
  • Information Processing by the Lateral Line System
  • Retinal Sampling and the Visual Field in Fishes
  • The Coevolution of Signal and Sense
  • Underwater Sound Generation and Acoustic Reception in Fishes with Some Notes on Frogs
  • The Design of Color Signals and Color Vision in Fishes
  • Color Vision in Fishes and Its Neural Basis
  • Chemically Mediated Strategies to Counter Predation
  • Mechanisms of Ultraviolet Polarization Vision in Fishes
  • Aspects of the Sensory Ecology of Cephalopods
  • Recent Progress in Aquatic Vertebrate Olfaction
  • Visual Adaptations to Limited Light Environments
  • Eye Design and Vision in Deep-Sea Fishes
  • Spectral Sensitivity Tuning in the Deep-Sea
  • Visual Adaptations in Crustaceans: Chromatic, Developmental, and Temporal Aspects
  • Central Coordination and Evolution of Sensory Inputs
  • Sensory Systems and Brain Evolution Across the Bilateria: Commonalities and Constraints
  • Electroreception: Extracting Behaviorally Important Signals from Noise
  • In a Fish’s Mind’s Eye: The Visual Pallium of Teleosts
  • Paddlefish and Platypus: Parallel Evolution of Passive Electroreception in a Rostral Bill Organ.