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Entomology Animated
United States
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 6 พ.ค. 2020
Entomology Animated is a video series that uses digital animation to celebrate the diversity and biology of insects. The series was created by Eric Keller, and it combines his love of evolutionary biology with his notable skills as a computer graphics artist. The videos are intended to be an enlightening resource for students, teachers, and curious people everywhere.
We are not scientists, but we do our best to be accurate. Entomology Animated is a true passion project, made in our free time to promote entomology, evolution, and scientific communication.
We think insects are awesome. And we want you to think so too.
We are not scientists, but we do our best to be accurate. Entomology Animated is a true passion project, made in our free time to promote entomology, evolution, and scientific communication.
We think insects are awesome. And we want you to think so too.
Overview of Honey Bee Mouth Part Anatomy Part 2
In this video I show my progress in constructing a rig and animation for an accurate depiction of how honey bee mouthparts work. Not quite there yet, its a work in progress, but this video gives an idea of the fascinating mechanisms that allow honey bees to manipulate their mouths for drinking and how thy can fold them back behind their heads.
มุมมอง: 667
วีดีโอ
Wednesday Opening Titles Fly Model Breakdown
มุมมอง 210ปีที่แล้ว
A quick look into the Green Bottle Fly I created for the opening titles of "Wednesday".
Wednesday Opening Titles Spider Model Breakdown
มุมมอง 325ปีที่แล้ว
A quick look into the Walnut orb Weaver spider I created for the opening titles of "Wednesday".
Overview of Honey Bee Mouth Part Anatomy
มุมมอง 1.6Kปีที่แล้ว
Part 1 in a series that takes a look at the mouthparts of bees. Specifically comparing the mouth parts of a honey bee worker (Apis mellifera) with the crazy long tongue of a male orchid bee (Euglossa dilemma). This chapter is an overview of my digital bee head models created in ZBrush and Maya. I talk about the basic anatomy as well as how I'm using reference to construct the models. The models...
Insect Vision Part 4: What Do Insects See?
มุมมอง 44K2 ปีที่แล้ว
Movies usually get how insects see all wrong-but what does *right* look like? We’re taking everything we’ve learned about insect vision and imagining how the world might appear through their eyes.
Phaneus vindex sculpting demo overview
มุมมอง 8442 ปีที่แล้ว
This video gives a general overview of my process for creating an accurate and realistic Rainbow Scarab beetle (Phanaeus vindex). I wanted to post this to help illuminate the process for teachers and artists who might be curious as to how CG technology can be used for scientific illustration. I have much more detailed step by step videos on this model available at www.entomologyanimated.com and...
Happy Halloween from Entomology Animated!
มุมมอง 6313 ปีที่แล้ว
Just a little trick or treat fun to celebrate our favorite time of year. Amblyipigids just seem like a perfect choice, not as horrifying as candy corn but definitely creepy. Check out the animations on www.entomologyanimated to learn about insect (and arachnid!) biology. There's a free series of tutorials that show my process for creating this model.
Insect Vision Part 3: Ocelli
มุมมอง 24K3 ปีที่แล้ว
Many insects-like an adorable worker honey bee (Apis mellifera)-have small eyes called ocelli that are totally different from their compound eyes. In part 3, we’re looking at the anatomy of the honey bee’s ocelli to help explain what these so-called “simple eyes” may actually do.
Demonstration:Tailless Whip Scorpion (Amblypygid) - Part 7
มุมมอง 2943 ปีที่แล้ว
The seventh video in a series that demonstrates my techniques for digitally sculpting a tailless whip scorpion in ZBrush.
Demonstration:Tailless Whip Scorpion (Amblypygid) - Part 6
มุมมอง 2033 ปีที่แล้ว
The sixth video in a series that demonstrates my techniques for digitally sculpting a tailless whip scorpion in ZBrush.
Demonstration:Tailless Whip Scorpion (Amblypygid) - Part 5
มุมมอง 1823 ปีที่แล้ว
The fifth video in a series that demonstrates my techniques for digitally sculpting a tailless whip scorpion in ZBrush.
Demonstration:Tailless Whip Scorpion (Amblypygid) - Part4
มุมมอง 1543 ปีที่แล้ว
The fourth video in a series that demonstrates my techniques for digitally sculpting a tailless whip scorpion in ZBrush.
Demonstration:Tailless Whip Scorpion (Amblypygid) - Part 3
มุมมอง 1893 ปีที่แล้ว
The third video in a series that demonstrates my techniques for digitally sculpting a tailless whip scorpion in ZBrush.
Demonstration:Tailless Whip Scorpion (Amblypygid) - Part 2
มุมมอง 1833 ปีที่แล้ว
The second video in a series that demonstrates my techniques for digitally sculpting a tailless whip scorpion in ZBrush.
Demonstration:Tailless Whip Scorpion (Amblypygid) - Part 1
มุมมอง 6023 ปีที่แล้ว
Demonstration:Tailless Whip Scorpion (Amblypygid) - Part 1
Insect Vision Part 2: Superposition Eye
มุมมอง 20K3 ปีที่แล้ว
Insect Vision Part 2: Superposition Eye
Demonstration: Rainbow Scarab Beetle - Part 14
มุมมอง 5194 ปีที่แล้ว
Demonstration: Rainbow Scarab Beetle - Part 14
Demonstration: Rainbow Scarab Beetle - Part 13
มุมมอง 1224 ปีที่แล้ว
Demonstration: Rainbow Scarab Beetle - Part 13
Demonstration: Rainbow Scarab Beetle - Part 12
มุมมอง 1474 ปีที่แล้ว
Demonstration: Rainbow Scarab Beetle - Part 12
Demonstration: Rainbow Scarab Beetle - Part 11
มุมมอง 1714 ปีที่แล้ว
Demonstration: Rainbow Scarab Beetle - Part 11
Demonstration: Rainbow Scarab Beetle - Part 10
มุมมอง 1434 ปีที่แล้ว
Demonstration: Rainbow Scarab Beetle - Part 10
Demonstration: Rainbow Scarab Beetle - Part 9
มุมมอง 1354 ปีที่แล้ว
Demonstration: Rainbow Scarab Beetle - Part 9
Demonstration: Rainbow Scarab Beetle - Part 8
มุมมอง 674 ปีที่แล้ว
Demonstration: Rainbow Scarab Beetle - Part 8
Demonstration: Rainbow Scarab Beetle - Part 7
มุมมอง 1324 ปีที่แล้ว
Demonstration: Rainbow Scarab Beetle - Part 7
Demonstration: Rainbow Scarab Beetle - Part 5
มุมมอง 2544 ปีที่แล้ว
Demonstration: Rainbow Scarab Beetle - Part 5
Demonstration: Rainbow Scarab Beetle - Part 6
มุมมอง 1114 ปีที่แล้ว
Demonstration: Rainbow Scarab Beetle - Part 6
Demonstration: Rainbow Scarab Beetle - Part 4
มุมมอง 1504 ปีที่แล้ว
Demonstration: Rainbow Scarab Beetle - Part 4
Demonstration: Rainbow Scarab Beetle - Part 3
มุมมอง 1914 ปีที่แล้ว
Demonstration: Rainbow Scarab Beetle - Part 3
Demonstration: Rainbow Scarab Beetle - Part 2
มุมมอง 3444 ปีที่แล้ว
Demonstration: Rainbow Scarab Beetle - Part 2
Great vids!
Will you ever return to youtube??
I love your channel! It would be amazing to see a breakdown on Colobopsis saundersi, or just the autothysis process seen in ants and termites. Can't wait for future videos.
Love it :) explained nicely 😋🤤
16 bit vision 🐝
the big question is that.......the universe is empty or in other words there is no mass or a raw and hard material present in universe....so how did the creator.....that is me......has constructed the bone....iron..steel..skin...hairs....glass..stone...cement...nails😀
Wow, entimology is fun. Good channel
Thank you.
Could the lacinia house salivary glands?
It is like 360° Camera with 140p resolution and 720fps
We are your biggest fans from Australia ♡
Ahh thankyou so much!! Your videos are incredible 👏❤
Wonderful video ! I searched high and low for a video about Ant or bug vision so thankyou for sharing your work ♡ The high quality visual demonstration is a massive cherry on top 👌
1k th like
Amazing
This is some of the most underrated content ever
Absolutely stellar videos. Have you thought about doing crabs, or peacock mantis shrimp?
how on earth this video only has 36k views? i thought it's a 10m+ video
Imagine having a 360 camera as a eye
This is what I was looking for. I wanted an insect's-eye view. I thought I was going to draw such a view for fun, but I guess I gotta make it a mosaic. I also wonder how I can draw this increased field of view. Maybe this is bests left for digital animation. But a movie in this style would be so cool.
great vid, but I don't like the 'pixlation'. humans too have discrete sensor cells, but don't see hard lines between them. a good blur between the pixels would be a more accurate illustration
This is the long version of I don't know.
This is exactly the topics I think about
We really aren't so different is honestly my take-home. We can see them, they can see us - both just going about our business.
Great video! The animations were top notch too 👍
سبحان الخالق
Thanks..... I loved this video
Man, incredible content! Your passion shines through, I hope to see more of you on my feed in the future!
Excellent video
Us thinking insects see the world in a honeycomb pattern of repeating images, would be like insects thinking humans see the world upside-down and reversed.
or that humans see the world in a tiny circle because of our pupils
Someone make a game where you play as insects with these shaders applied
This is really cool
Do the three eyes have eyelids?
How do they even know this, can they dissect an ant eye?
This is incredible!
Great animations and informative. Thanks!
Fascinating how this view of the world is equally as valid as the way we see it.
Best explanation
Your videos are WONDERFUL!! MARVELLOUS! Please keep it up! God bless you.
Wow... that is incredible & fascinating. Thank you for putting this together. Definitely wish school had been this interesting.
Mans very underrated
So cool video wow
Thank you for this video! I was just looking at a bug outside and had this very question - how do they see? This short video was so helpful and animated wonderfully
Nice
God was wildin when he made that one damn 1:49
Thanks for video ❤
Fantastic video, thank you. I was researching this subject and missing a good video visualization, really the best one I've come across, great work!
are so cute
I wonder if an insect really sees the world in pixels. I rather think that its brain assembles all the individual pixels into a coherent image.
I'd imagine it would probably look more like newspaper print. Thousands of dots create pictures, not pixels. Or perhaps things are just really blurry.
Can insects see atoms? Do ants wobble when they march because they're avoiding things we can't see? Do gnats see atoms?
Atoms are incredibly tiny. They are so small that visible light waves do not reflect off of them. Atoms only appear as dots to even the most powerful microscopes.