Texture-defined objects influence responses of blowfly motion-sensitive neurons under natural dynamical conditions

The responses of visual interneurons of flies involved in the processing of motion information do not only depend on the velocity, but also on other stimulus parameters, such as the contrast and the spatial frequency content of the stimulus pattern. These dependencies have been known for long, but i...

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Main Authors: Thomas W. Ullrich, Roland eKern, Martin eEgelhaaf
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-04-01
Series:Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnint.2014.00034/full
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spelling doaj-201c84a85b184c678084ff0cd42caaa32020-11-24T23:57:24ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience1662-51452014-04-01810.3389/fnint.2014.0003479448Texture-defined objects influence responses of blowfly motion-sensitive neurons under natural dynamical conditionsThomas W. Ullrich0Roland eKern1Martin eEgelhaaf2Bielefeld UniversityBielefeld UniversityBielefeld UniversityThe responses of visual interneurons of flies involved in the processing of motion information do not only depend on the velocity, but also on other stimulus parameters, such as the contrast and the spatial frequency content of the stimulus pattern. These dependencies have been known for long, but it is still an open question how they affect the neurons’ performance in extracting information about the structure of the environment under the specific dynamical conditions of natural flight. Free-flight of blowflies is characterized by sequences of phases of translational movements lasting for just 30-100 milliseconds interspersed with even shorter and extremely rapid saccade-like rotational shifts in flight and gaze direction. Previous studies already analyzed how nearby objects, leading to relative motion on the retina with respect to a more distant background, influenced the response of a class of fly motion sensitive visual interneurons, the HS cells. In the present study, we focused on objects that differed from their background by discontinuities either in their brightness contrast or in their spatial frequency content. We found strong object-induced effects on the membrane potential even during the short intersaccadic intervals, if the background contrast was small and the object contrast sufficiently high. The object evoked similar response increments provided that it contained higher spatial frequencies than the background, but not under reversed conditions. This asymmetry in the response behavior is partly a consequence of the depolarization level induced by the background. Thus, our results suggest that, under the specific dynamical conditions of natural flight, i.e. on a very short timescale, the responses of HS cells represent object information depending on the polarity of the difference between object and background contrast and spatial frequency content.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnint.2014.00034/fullOptic FlowVisionneural activitycontrastBlowflyspatial discontinuity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thomas W. Ullrich
Roland eKern
Martin eEgelhaaf
spellingShingle Thomas W. Ullrich
Roland eKern
Martin eEgelhaaf
Texture-defined objects influence responses of blowfly motion-sensitive neurons under natural dynamical conditions
Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience
Optic Flow
Vision
neural activity
contrast
Blowfly
spatial discontinuity
author_facet Thomas W. Ullrich
Roland eKern
Martin eEgelhaaf
author_sort Thomas W. Ullrich
title Texture-defined objects influence responses of blowfly motion-sensitive neurons under natural dynamical conditions
title_short Texture-defined objects influence responses of blowfly motion-sensitive neurons under natural dynamical conditions
title_full Texture-defined objects influence responses of blowfly motion-sensitive neurons under natural dynamical conditions
title_fullStr Texture-defined objects influence responses of blowfly motion-sensitive neurons under natural dynamical conditions
title_full_unstemmed Texture-defined objects influence responses of blowfly motion-sensitive neurons under natural dynamical conditions
title_sort texture-defined objects influence responses of blowfly motion-sensitive neurons under natural dynamical conditions
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience
issn 1662-5145
publishDate 2014-04-01
description The responses of visual interneurons of flies involved in the processing of motion information do not only depend on the velocity, but also on other stimulus parameters, such as the contrast and the spatial frequency content of the stimulus pattern. These dependencies have been known for long, but it is still an open question how they affect the neurons’ performance in extracting information about the structure of the environment under the specific dynamical conditions of natural flight. Free-flight of blowflies is characterized by sequences of phases of translational movements lasting for just 30-100 milliseconds interspersed with even shorter and extremely rapid saccade-like rotational shifts in flight and gaze direction. Previous studies already analyzed how nearby objects, leading to relative motion on the retina with respect to a more distant background, influenced the response of a class of fly motion sensitive visual interneurons, the HS cells. In the present study, we focused on objects that differed from their background by discontinuities either in their brightness contrast or in their spatial frequency content. We found strong object-induced effects on the membrane potential even during the short intersaccadic intervals, if the background contrast was small and the object contrast sufficiently high. The object evoked similar response increments provided that it contained higher spatial frequencies than the background, but not under reversed conditions. This asymmetry in the response behavior is partly a consequence of the depolarization level induced by the background. Thus, our results suggest that, under the specific dynamical conditions of natural flight, i.e. on a very short timescale, the responses of HS cells represent object information depending on the polarity of the difference between object and background contrast and spatial frequency content.
topic Optic Flow
Vision
neural activity
contrast
Blowfly
spatial discontinuity
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnint.2014.00034/full
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AT rolandekern texturedefinedobjectsinfluenceresponsesofblowflymotionsensitiveneuronsundernaturaldynamicalconditions
AT martineegelhaaf texturedefinedobjectsinfluenceresponsesofblowflymotionsensitiveneuronsundernaturaldynamicalconditions
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