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OT - Fly Swatting 101
Spring Chicken
Posts: 10,255
For those of us who think we know everything, here's something else to add to the list. Maybe it will come in handy over the holiday weekend while cooking outside.
________________________________________________
Why You Can't Swat a Fly
Sharon Begley
The reason you can’t swat a fly is that, for a creature with a brain hardly deserving of the name, the fly is a marvel of calculating ability. But before I explain what scientists led by Michael Dickinson of the California Institute of Technology (that would be the Dickinson whose e-mail is "flyman") have learned about how the fly brain calculates the location of the looming swatter, formulates an escape plan and plants its legs in an optimal position to hop out of the way (all within about 100 milliseconds of spotting the swatter), let’s cut to the chase: the best way to swat a fly, Dickinson says, is “not to swat at the fly’s starting position, but rather to aim a bit forward of that to anticipate where the fly is going to jump when it first sees your swatter.”
Where will it jump? Using high-resolution, high-speed imaging of flies in action, the scientists are reporting today online in Current Biology, they found that if the descending swatter (they used a 6-inch-diameter black disk, dropping at a 50-degree angle toward a fly) comes from in front of the fly, the fly moves its middle legs forward and leans back, then raises and extends its legs to push off backward, away from the swatter. Are you approaching your quarry from behind? The fly has a nearly 360-degree field of view and can see behind itself, so when it spies the swatter behind it it moves its middle legs a tiny bit backward and flies forward. With a swatter from the side, the fly keeps its middle legs still and leans in the opposite direction before jumping. The idea is to position its center of mass so that when the legs push off the fly will evade the swatter.
“When the fly makes planning movements prior to takeoff, it takes into account its body position at the time it first sees the threat,” Dickinson says. “The fly somehow ‘knows’ whether it needs to make large or small postural changes to reach the correct preflight posture.” It does all this “long” (in fly time) before it takes off. “These movements are made very rapidly, within about 200 milliseconds” of seeing the swatter, says Dickinson, “but within that time the animal determines where the threat is coming from and activates an appropriate set of movements to position its legs and wings.”
Don’t believe the folk wisdom that if you approach the fly really, really slowly so your swatter doesn’t stir the air then the fly won’t notice. The Caltech scientists found that flies can tell you’re coming by sight alone—and remember that 360-degrees of vision thing.
It is Dickinson’s hope that discoveries about the fly’s neuronal processing will shed light on more complicated brains, not that his work will help humans kill flies better. His admiration for the little guys’ abilities, in fact, have made him hope that people will “think before they swat.”
Once again we know everything worth knowing.
You're welcome.
Spring "A Wealth Of Unimportant Knowledge" Chicken
Spring Texas USA
________________________________________________
Why You Can't Swat a Fly
Sharon Begley
The reason you can’t swat a fly is that, for a creature with a brain hardly deserving of the name, the fly is a marvel of calculating ability. But before I explain what scientists led by Michael Dickinson of the California Institute of Technology (that would be the Dickinson whose e-mail is "flyman") have learned about how the fly brain calculates the location of the looming swatter, formulates an escape plan and plants its legs in an optimal position to hop out of the way (all within about 100 milliseconds of spotting the swatter), let’s cut to the chase: the best way to swat a fly, Dickinson says, is “not to swat at the fly’s starting position, but rather to aim a bit forward of that to anticipate where the fly is going to jump when it first sees your swatter.”
Where will it jump? Using high-resolution, high-speed imaging of flies in action, the scientists are reporting today online in Current Biology, they found that if the descending swatter (they used a 6-inch-diameter black disk, dropping at a 50-degree angle toward a fly) comes from in front of the fly, the fly moves its middle legs forward and leans back, then raises and extends its legs to push off backward, away from the swatter. Are you approaching your quarry from behind? The fly has a nearly 360-degree field of view and can see behind itself, so when it spies the swatter behind it it moves its middle legs a tiny bit backward and flies forward. With a swatter from the side, the fly keeps its middle legs still and leans in the opposite direction before jumping. The idea is to position its center of mass so that when the legs push off the fly will evade the swatter.
“When the fly makes planning movements prior to takeoff, it takes into account its body position at the time it first sees the threat,” Dickinson says. “The fly somehow ‘knows’ whether it needs to make large or small postural changes to reach the correct preflight posture.” It does all this “long” (in fly time) before it takes off. “These movements are made very rapidly, within about 200 milliseconds” of seeing the swatter, says Dickinson, “but within that time the animal determines where the threat is coming from and activates an appropriate set of movements to position its legs and wings.”
Don’t believe the folk wisdom that if you approach the fly really, really slowly so your swatter doesn’t stir the air then the fly won’t notice. The Caltech scientists found that flies can tell you’re coming by sight alone—and remember that 360-degrees of vision thing.
It is Dickinson’s hope that discoveries about the fly’s neuronal processing will shed light on more complicated brains, not that his work will help humans kill flies better. His admiration for the little guys’ abilities, in fact, have made him hope that people will “think before they swat.”
Once again we know everything worth knowing.
You're welcome.
Spring "A Wealth Of Unimportant Knowledge" Chicken
Spring Texas USA
Comments
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Amazing little critters but even the BGE can't improve their taste! :P :PYou must master temp, smoke, and time to achive moisture, taste, and texture! Visit www.bubbatim.com for BRISKET HELP
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Perhaps in another country they may be very tasty, as are a number of things I wouldn't eat on a bet.
But you're right, they are amazing. About as amazing as they are annoying.
Spring "Shoo Fly Don't Bother Me" Chicken -
SC,
I am glad you have WAY too much research time for "Unimportant Knowledge".
Thanks for a review of the nearly instantaneous, flight check of a fly.
Good morning Leroy,Billy
Wilson, NC
Large BGE - WiFi Stoker - Thermapen - 250 Cookbooks -
As Elvis would say, "Tank you, tank you vwerry mush"
(After all, he IS dead you know)
Spring "Elvis Fan" Chicken -
Get one of these: http://www.amazingflygun.com/
It squishes them before they know what's happening (really works)! -
That's why I just torch the little winged maggots with MAPP gas :woohoo: :silly: !
Outsmart this flame, you little insect;)Knoxville, TN
Nibble Me This -
Wonder if it will work while they're in flight? It would certainly add to the adventture LOL
Spring "Fly Season Is Open" Chicken -
Must be fun putting out the fires around your house LOL
Spring "Fanning The Flames" Chicken -
half a dozen strategically placed chameleons will take care of it :woohoo:
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Would that be considered "fattening up chameleons" for your next cook? LOL
Spring "Way Way Up The Food Chain" Chicken
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