Mandyam Veerambudi Srinivasan AM FRS, also known as "Srini", (born 1948) is an Australian bioengineer and neuroscientist [1] who studies visual systems, particularly those of bees and birds. [2] [3]
A faculty member at the University of Queensland, he is a recipient of the Prime Minister's Prize for Science and a fellow of the Australian Academy of Science and the Royal Society (elected 2001). [4] [5]
Srinivasan was born in Poona, India in 1948. His early interests included making transistor radios with his father. His family moved to Calcutta and Delhi before settling in Bangalore, where Srinivasan completed his schooling from the Bishop Cotton Boys' School in 1962. In tertiary education, he earned a number of degrees in the years following: [1] [6]
After completing his PhD in the US, Srinivasan moved to Canberra in 1978 to take up a position at the Departments of Neurobiology and Applied Mathematics at the Australian National University (ANU), where he stayed until 1982, when he secured a research position in Zurich, Switzerland, to work on insect behaviour. It was here that he learnt how to train and work with honeybees. In 1985 he returned to the ANU, and set up an interdisciplinary research group which focused on investigating how bees use their vision to navigate and land very precisely. [1]
In 2007, Srinivisan took up a position working at the Queensland Brain Institute and the School of Information Technology and Electrical Engineering of the University of Queensland.
Srinivasan delivered the 12th Lecture [7] organised by the General K.S. Thimayya Memorial Trust.
At Yale, Srinivasan did research on movement perception in flies, and became interested in the vision of insects. [1]
Focusing his attention on honey bees, in particular the Western honey bee, Srinivasan has explored how simple animal systems display complex behaviours. This broad field has applications in robotics, especially unmanned aerial vehicles because of the competing needs for autonomy and a lightweight control system. [8]
Bees are highly competent fliers. Srinivasan has shown that many ostensibly complex flight behaviours can be attributed to the tendency of the bee to keep optic flow constant. Some examples:[ citation needed ]
Srinivasan's research looks mainly at "vision, perception and cognition in animals with simple nervous systems, and on how these might be used in machine vision and robotics". [1]
Srinivasan's work has been recognised and honoured by a number of awards and honours, including: [1] [6]
As of July 2020 [update] , Srinivasan had authored 15 book chapters, 189 journal articles, 69 conference papers, and had registered two patents. The patents were registered with co-authors Javaan Singh Chahl and other researchers: a "novel system for panoramic video surveillance" in 1997, and an imaging system in 2002 (US). [10]
In 2020, a PubPeer comment pointed out issues related to undisclosed data re-use for two papers by Srinivasan. [11] Srinivasan published two expressions of concern which confirmed the issues, but also argued that they do not affect the conclusions of the articles. [12] [13]
In 2024, in a non-peer reviewed preprint, [14] allegations of scientific misconduct were made against at least ten of Srinivasan's papers regarding honeybee odometry and navigation, including miscalculations, reuse of images, and manipulation of data. [15] Srinivasan and his colleagues, his critics, and outside experts have discussed the allegations in non-peer reviewed forums. [16] [17] [18] Srinivasan and colleagues have for example pointed out that the critics do not work in the research field, and claimed that the critics themselves made errors in their preprint. [15]
In an editorial in the Journal of Comparative Physiology A, Eric Warrant, the head of the sensory biology division at Lund University discussed the allegations and the process by which they played out. [19] He said that the results of Srinivasan had been since been independently confirmed by other research teams, and maintained that though Srinivasan and colleagues are guilty of mistakes and sloppiness, the results of their work are valid. He particularly decried the manner in which the criticism was levied, which he says gave Srinivasan no time to respond before the claims were posted both on social media and Wikipedia.
Currently the group is working on four projects in the area of mid-air collision avoidance...The work of Srinivasan's group at the University of Queensland.