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Jens P Lindemann

Explore the profile of Jens P Lindemann including associated specialties, affiliations and a list of published articles. Areas
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Articles 7
Citations 112
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Recent Articles
1.
Egelhaaf M, Lindemann J
Path integration is a key navigation mechanism used by many animals, involving the integration of direction and distance of path segments to form a goal vector that allows an animal...
2.
Li J, Lindemann J, Egelhaaf M
PLoS Comput Biol . 2017 Dec; 13(12):e1005919. PMID: 29281631
Neuronal representation and extraction of spatial information are essential for behavioral control. For flying insects, a plausible way to gain spatial information is to exploit distance-dependent optic flow that is...
3.
Monteagudo J, Lindemann J, Egelhaaf M
J Exp Biol . 2017 Nov; 220(Pt 24):4578-4582. PMID: 29097591
During locomotion, animals employ visual and mechanical cues in order to establish the orientation of their head, which reflects the orientation of the visual coordinate system. However, in certain situations,...
4.
Li J, Lindemann J, Egelhaaf M
Front Comput Neurosci . 2016 Nov; 10:111. PMID: 27818631
Flying insects, such as flies or bees, rely on consistent information regarding the depth structure of the environment when performing their flight maneuvers in cluttered natural environments. These behaviors include...
5.
Bertrand O, Lindemann J, Egelhaaf M
PLoS Comput Biol . 2015 Nov; 11(11):e1004339. PMID: 26583771
Avoiding collisions is one of the most basic needs of any mobile agent, both biological and technical, when searching around or aiming toward a goal. We propose a model of...
6.
Schwegmann A, Lindemann J, Egelhaaf M
Front Comput Neurosci . 2014 Aug; 8:83. PMID: 25136314
Knowing the depth structure of the environment is crucial for moving animals in many behavioral contexts, such as collision avoidance, targeting objects, or spatial navigation. An important source of depth...
7.
Lindemann J, Egelhaaf M
Front Behav Neurosci . 2013 Jan; 6:92. PMID: 23335890
MANY FLYING INSECTS EXHIBIT AN ACTIVE FLIGHT AND GAZE STRATEGY: purely translational flight segments alternate with quick turns called saccades. To generate such a saccadic flight pattern, the animals decide...
8.
Egelhaaf M, Boeddeker N, Kern R, Kurtz R, Lindemann J
Front Neural Circuits . 2012 Dec; 6:108. PMID: 23269913
Insects such as flies or bees, with their miniature brains, are able to control highly aerobatic flight maneuvres and to solve spatial vision tasks, such as avoiding collisions with obstacles,...