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Caltech scientists discover why flies are so hard to swat

Over the past two decades, Michael Dickinson has been interviewed by reporters hundreds of times about his research on the biomechanics of insect flight. One question from the press has always dogged him: Why are flies so hard to swat?

"Now I can finally answer," says Dickinson, the Esther M. and Abe M. Zarem Professor of Bioengineering at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech).

Using high-resolution, high-speed digital imaging of fruit flies (Drosophila melanogaster) faced with a looming swatter, Dickinson and graduate student Gwyneth Card have determined the secret to a fly's evasive maneuvering. Long before the fly leaps, its tiny brain calculates the location of the impending threat, comes up with an escape plan, and places its legs in an optimal position to hop out of the way in the opposite direction. All of this action takes place within about 100 milliseconds after the fly first spots the swatter.

"This illustrates how rapidly the fly's brain can process sensory information into an appropriate motor response," Dickinson says.

For example, the videos showed that if the descending swatter--actually, a 14-centimeter-diameter black disk, dropping at a 50-degree angle toward a fly standing at the center of a small platform--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. When the threat comes from the back, however, the fly (which has a nearly 360-degree field of view and can see behind itself) moves its middle legs a tiny bit backwards. With a threat from the side, the fly keeps its middle legs stationary, but leans its whole body in the opposite direction before it jumps.

"We also found that when the fly makes planning movements prior to take-off, it takes into account its body position at the time it first sees the threat," Dickinson says. "When it first notices an approaching threat, a fly's body might be in any sort of posture depending on what it was doing at the time, like grooming, feeding, walking, or courting. Our experiments showed that the fly somehow 'knows' whether it needs to make large or small postural changes to reach the correct preflight posture. This means that the fly must integrate visual information from its eyes, which tell it where the threat is approaching from, with mechanosensory information from its legs, which tells it how to move to reach the proper preflight pose."

The results offer new insight into the fly nervous system, and suggest that within the fly brain there is a map in which the position of the looming threat "is transformed into an appropriate pattern of leg and body motion prior to take off," Dickinson says. "This is a rather sophisticated sensory-to-motor transformation and the search is on to find the place in the brain where this happens," he says.

Dickinson's research also suggests an optimal method for actually swatting a fly. "It is best 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," he says.

August 28, 2008

Comments

Slow is better

June 16, 2009 by Anonymous, 20 weeks 5 days ago
Comment id: 37303

I always catch flies by slowly approaching them.

This is funny. So you're

September 1, 2008 by Anonymous, 1 year 9 weeks ago
Comment id: 31745

I think a blank sheet works better, because that makes it harder for a fly to detect the movement of it. They seem to be uncapable of detecting the distance between themselves and the paper.

Killing flies is just silly.

August 29, 2008 by Anonymous, 1 year 10 weeks ago
Comment id: 31701

Killing flies is just silly. What do they do that merits its death? They are just...an annoyance. That's it.

Soooo, should we kill the poor bastards just because they fly all over the place, or should we open the windows to let them go and respect life (with its wonderful complexity gained through millions of years of trial and error) a little bit?

This is funny. So you're

August 29, 2008 by Anonymous, 1 year 10 weeks ago
Comment id: 31699

This is funny. So you're saying that printed material doesn't work as well as blank material? Maybe it's the subject of the headline that attracts the fly.

Killing Flies...

August 29, 2008 by Anonymous, 1 year 10 weeks ago
Comment id: 31696

I remember sitting by this window in my senior year high school history class. For some reason, in the spring, flies always ended up flying around this window. I never saw them in any other class. At any rate, I would get sick of their buzzing me and figured out a fail safe way of killing them - rubber bands. I would use the wide kind and slip one end over my thumb and pull the other end back. Then cautiously I would get into a good aiming position. The fly would be doing exactly what the article described - watch my hand, determining what threat it caused and the proper predetermined angle of escape. Of course the thing didn't realize that it wasn't my hand that was the threat but the rubber band that it was serving as the delivery system for.

As you might guess, all it took was careful aim and timing and the simple release of the stretched end of the rubber band, and suddenly that fly was getting hit with enough force to stun it at least but many times knocking it into the glass window or some other hard surface, causing fatal injuries if not instant death.

I never tried a towel before, I like more control than I think that a towel would give me. A fly swatter can cause too much of a mess sometimes as well. I eventually figured out how to deliver a blow with a rolled up piece of paper so fast that the fly couldn't see it coming. I'd yank the blow back at just the right moment so that the energy of the blow was transfered to the fly but not the crushing follow through behind it that usually squashes it against whatever it's sitting on, causing a mess. I got pretty good at it and was able to leave a fly intact but yet very, very dead.

the easiest way

August 29, 2008 by Anonymous, 1 year 10 weeks ago
Comment id: 31679

I always use a blank sheet of paper. If you move it very slowly towards the fly, he doesn't even notice it coming. You can just press it on the fly.

Works every time. It doesn't work as well if there is contrasting printing on it.

The failsafe way to swat a fly

August 28, 2008 by Anonymous, 1 year 10 weeks ago
Comment id: 31675

I've held this secret in the family for years. The one true way to swat a fly, or many flies, is with a dish towel or a t-shirt. Whereas wind resistance and easy-to-recognize shapes like fly swatters, shoes and magazines telegraph the fly to flee, they cannot recognize or feel the threat of the dish towel or t-shirt until it's too late. I can kill as many as ten flies in a row without one miss when I use a dish towel. It's really simple that it's laughable. Sometimes the fly is knocked silly and just sits there waiting for you to strike with the finishing blow.
Go ahead and try it. Works every single time.

As if this wasn't obvious...

August 28, 2008 by Anonymous, 1 year 10 weeks ago
Comment id: 31672

As if this wasn't obvious... but you know what you can do then?

You distract the fly with one hand and swat them with the other!

flies

August 28, 2008 by Anonymous, 1 year 10 weeks ago
Comment id: 31671

"It is best 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,"

And if all of mankind starts doing that, we will have flies that do just the opposite of what they are doing now.

Which is OK if it causes global cooling.

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