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Jumping spiders have great eyes —
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four pairs of them, each pair with a different task.
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The result is fantastic vision that allows them
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to stalk and hunt prey, and make some spectacular jumps.
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But how exactly do those eyes work?
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Scientists know they interact with each other,
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but in what way?
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To give a spider an eye test, researchers
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had to attach the creature to the apparatus.
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They held it down with a plastic and paraffin film
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and made an opening to dab some wax on the spider head.
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Then, they attached a hat straight out of Dr. Seuss,
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and put the spider in a custom-built eye tracker —
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one of only two such machines in the world.
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Held in place on a trackball, the spider
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watched video images.
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Ultraviolet light penetrated the spider's head
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to illuminate what was going on in there,
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and researchers aimed a camera at the spider's
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two main eyes — the big ones up front.
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Flexible tubes from the eye to the retina
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allow the spider to look here and there.
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See them moving?
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Here, the image that the spider is seeing
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is superimposed over the retinas.
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They look like boomerangs.
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You can see them following the black dot across the screen.
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But the retinas have a small field of vision.
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They mainly pick up fine detail,
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so they have to know where to look.
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That's the role of the most forward pair of small eyes.
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They pick up motion and alert the main eyes.
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When the small eyes were painted over,
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the main eyes were in the dark, like in this example.
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See, the retinas don't track the dot.
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Figuring out how the spider's tiny brain
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manages this eye-to-eye communication
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is next on the agenda.
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And in case you were wondering,
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the spiders are freed at the end of the experiment.
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Off comes the hat, off goes the spider.