Tuesday, June 30, 2026
Science

Mice actively seek better views to make visual decisions, virtual reality experiments show

Animals don't experience the world passively. A hawk tilts its head to track prey. A person leans forward to read a sign. Scientists call this "active sensing": moving the body to gather better information. A specific version of active sensing is infotaxis, which describes how animals move strategic...

Mice actively seek better views to make visual decisions, virtual reality experiments show
Image: Phys.org
Animals don't experience the world passively. A hawk tilts its head to track prey. A person leans forward to read a sign. Scientists call this "active sensing": moving the body to gather better information. A specific version of active sensing is infotaxis, which describes how animals move strategically to maximize the information they gain from their surroundings. Whether mice use this strategy has remained an open question, despite their central role in neuroscience research.

Originally published at Phys.org

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