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Comparative analysis of sensor noise for target detection in dragonfly eyes. Dragonflies hunt tiny prey in the low-light conditions of late dusk, a signal-to-noise problem that challenges any engineer

The University of Adelaide — Discovery Projects
Amount
Up to $624,834
Closes
Friday 31 December 2027
Status
unknown
Type
open opportunity
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Description

Comparative analysis of sensor noise for target detection in dragonfly eyes. Dragonflies hunt tiny prey in the low-light conditions of late dusk, a signal-to-noise problem that challenges any engineered system. Using a comparative approach across dragonfly species, we aim to use novel optical and physiological measures to determine how sensors with noise underlie target-detection, in varying scene brightness. The project outcomes will be a comparative characterisation of signal-to-noise measures of dragonfly eye optics (including eye size) and early sensory neurons. We will match detection thresholds with downstream target-detecting neurons and dragonfly behaviour. This will provide insight into signal detection, which is a ubiquitous problem across information processing, computer vision and autonomous systems.. Scheme: Discovery Projects. Field: 3209 - Neurosciences. Lead: A/Prof Steven Wiederman

Categories
healthtechnology
Target Recipients
researchersuniversities

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Discovery method: arc-grants
Last verified: Monday 2 March 2026
Added: Saturday 28 February 2026