A problem confronted by visual systems is that of discriminating textures.
It appears that a recently described class of orientation-tuned neurones in
the bee brain embody properties of mechanisms used by humans to discrimina
te complex textures. In particular these mechanisms would permit bees to di
scriminate a large range of textures by giving bees access to information r
elated to higher-order correlations between texture elements. To determine
if bees can exploit such textural information we have conducted behavioural
experiments employing iso-dipole textures, that statistically speaking, di
ffer from binary noise textures, and each other, only in their third-order
correlation functions. While these textures are not themselves of any ethol
ogical significance their special properties permit us to show that bees ca
n potentially use a very large palette of textures to classify textured obj
ects. In electrophysiological experiments we demonstrate the requisite cont
rast sign invariance (rectification) of the orientation-selective neurones'
responses and discuss other similarities of these neurones' responses to m
odels accounting for human texture discrimination.