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1.
J Neurosci ; 35(19): 7587-99, 2015 May 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25972183

RESUMO

Many animals rely on visual figure-ground discrimination to aid in navigation, and to draw attention to salient features like conspecifics or predators. Even figures that are similar in pattern and luminance to the visual surroundings can be distinguished by the optical disparity generated by their relative motion against the ground, and yet the neural mechanisms underlying these visual discriminations are not well understood. We show in flies that a diverse array of figure-ground stimuli containing a motion-defined edge elicit statistically similar behavioral responses to one another, and statistically distinct behavioral responses from ground motion alone. From studies in larger flies and other insect species, we hypothesized that the circuitry of the lobula--one of the four, primary neuropiles of the fly optic lobe--performs this visual discrimination. Using calcium imaging of input dendrites, we then show that information encoded in cells projecting from the lobula to discrete optic glomeruli in the central brain group these sets of figure-ground stimuli in a homologous manner to the behavior; "figure-like" stimuli are coded similar to one another and "ground-like" stimuli are encoded differently. One cell class responds to the leading edge of a figure and is suppressed by ground motion. Two other classes cluster any figure-like stimuli, including a figure moving opposite the ground, distinctly from ground alone. This evidence demonstrates that lobula outputs provide a diverse basis set encoding visual features necessary for figure detection.


Assuntos
Percepção de Movimento/fisiologia , Rede Nervosa/fisiologia , Lobo Óptico de Animais não Mamíferos/citologia , Células Receptoras Sensoriais/fisiologia , Animais , Animais Geneticamente Modificados , Antígenos CD8/genética , Cálcio/metabolismo , Drosophila , Proteínas de Drosophila/genética , Proteínas de Drosophila/metabolismo , Proteínas de Fluorescência Verde/genética , Microscopia Confocal , Orientação/fisiologia , Estimulação Luminosa , Fatores de Transcrição/genética , Fatores de Transcrição/metabolismo , Vias Visuais/fisiologia
2.
Front Neural Circuits ; 8: 130, 2014.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25400550

RESUMO

A moving visual figure may contain first-order signals defined by variation in mean luminance, as well as second-order signals defined by constant mean luminance and variation in luminance envelope, or higher-order signals that cannot be estimated by taking higher moments of the luminance distribution. Separating these properties of a moving figure to experimentally probe the visual subsystems that encode them is technically challenging and has resulted in debated mechanisms of visual object detection by flies. Our prior work took a white noise systems identification approach using a commercially available electronic display system to characterize the spatial variation in the temporal dynamics of two distinct subsystems for first- and higher-order components of visual figure tracking. The method relied on the use of single pixel displacements of two visual stimuli according to two binary maximum length shift register sequences (m-sequences) and cross-correlation of each m-sequence with time-varying flight steering measurements. The resultant spatio-temporal action fields represent temporal impulse responses parameterized by the azimuthal location of the visual figure, one STAF for first-order and another for higher-order components of compound stimuli. Here we review m-sequence and reverse correlation procedures, then describe our application in detail, provide Matlab code, validate the STAFs, and demonstrate the utility and robustness of STAFs by predicting the results of other published experimental procedures. This method has demonstrated how two relatively modest innovations on classical white noise analysis--the inclusion of space as a way to organize response kernels and the use of linear decoupling to measure the response to two channels of visual information simultaneously--could substantially improve our basic understanding of visual processing in the fly.


Assuntos
Percepção de Movimento/fisiologia , Software , Visão Ocular/fisiologia , Campos Visuais/fisiologia , Vias Visuais/fisiologia , Análise de Variância , Animais , Drosophila , Modelos Biológicos , Estimulação Luminosa , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes
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