Bees adjust their speed to keep turning forces constant, new research from the Queensland Brain Institute, UQ shows. The findings can be applied to robots and autonomous vehicles.
New research from The University of Queensland has shown for the first time that visual hallucinations in people with macular degeneration are associated with abnormally heightened activity in the visual cortex of the brain.
How do predators learn what they can and cannot eat by how their prey looks? It’s all about the pattern edge, say University of Queensland researchers.
Paying attention to a location helps the brain to process not just what you can see there, but also what you can’t – suggesting that attention and awareness are controlled by different pathways in the brain.
Genes play a much larger role than previously thought in how long you might stay in formal education, say researchers from one of the largest genetic studies ever completed.
Professor Peter Visscher will join the ranks of eminent scientists from around the world following his election as a Fellow of the Royal Society of London.
Several areas of the brain involved in processing visual information respond differently depending on whether an object is in an expected or an unexpected location.