In Vivo Imaging Reveals Composite Coding for Diagonal Motion in the Drosophila Visual System.
Understanding information coding is important for resolving the functions of visual neural circuits. The motion vision system is a classic model for studying information coding as it contains a concise and complete information-processing circuit. In Drosophila, the axon terminals of motion-detection...
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doaj-ab97a799b53747f4a20affd4733333602020-11-24T21:14:19ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-011110e016402010.1371/journal.pone.0164020In Vivo Imaging Reveals Composite Coding for Diagonal Motion in the Drosophila Visual System.Yuanlei YueShanshan KeWei ZhouJin ChangUnderstanding information coding is important for resolving the functions of visual neural circuits. The motion vision system is a classic model for studying information coding as it contains a concise and complete information-processing circuit. In Drosophila, the axon terminals of motion-detection neurons (T4 and T5) project to the lobula plate, which comprises four regions that respond to the four cardinal directions of motion. The lobula plate thus represents a topographic map on a transverse plane. This enables us to study the coding of diagonal motion by investigating its response pattern. By using in vivo two-photon calcium imaging, we found that the axon terminals of T4 and T5 cells in the lobula plate were activated during diagonal motion. Further experiments showed that the response to diagonal motion is distributed over the following two regions compared to the cardinal directions of motion-a diagonal motion selective response region and a non-selective response region-which overlap with the response regions of the two vector-correlated cardinal directions of motion. Interestingly, the sizes of the non-selective response regions are linearly correlated with the angle of the diagonal motion. These results revealed that the Drosophila visual system employs a composite coding for diagonal motion that includes both independent coding and vector decomposition coding.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5047565?pdf=render |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Yuanlei Yue Shanshan Ke Wei Zhou Jin Chang |
spellingShingle |
Yuanlei Yue Shanshan Ke Wei Zhou Jin Chang In Vivo Imaging Reveals Composite Coding for Diagonal Motion in the Drosophila Visual System. PLoS ONE |
author_facet |
Yuanlei Yue Shanshan Ke Wei Zhou Jin Chang |
author_sort |
Yuanlei Yue |
title |
In Vivo Imaging Reveals Composite Coding for Diagonal Motion in the Drosophila Visual System. |
title_short |
In Vivo Imaging Reveals Composite Coding for Diagonal Motion in the Drosophila Visual System. |
title_full |
In Vivo Imaging Reveals Composite Coding for Diagonal Motion in the Drosophila Visual System. |
title_fullStr |
In Vivo Imaging Reveals Composite Coding for Diagonal Motion in the Drosophila Visual System. |
title_full_unstemmed |
In Vivo Imaging Reveals Composite Coding for Diagonal Motion in the Drosophila Visual System. |
title_sort |
in vivo imaging reveals composite coding for diagonal motion in the drosophila visual system. |
publisher |
Public Library of Science (PLoS) |
series |
PLoS ONE |
issn |
1932-6203 |
publishDate |
2016-01-01 |
description |
Understanding information coding is important for resolving the functions of visual neural circuits. The motion vision system is a classic model for studying information coding as it contains a concise and complete information-processing circuit. In Drosophila, the axon terminals of motion-detection neurons (T4 and T5) project to the lobula plate, which comprises four regions that respond to the four cardinal directions of motion. The lobula plate thus represents a topographic map on a transverse plane. This enables us to study the coding of diagonal motion by investigating its response pattern. By using in vivo two-photon calcium imaging, we found that the axon terminals of T4 and T5 cells in the lobula plate were activated during diagonal motion. Further experiments showed that the response to diagonal motion is distributed over the following two regions compared to the cardinal directions of motion-a diagonal motion selective response region and a non-selective response region-which overlap with the response regions of the two vector-correlated cardinal directions of motion. Interestingly, the sizes of the non-selective response regions are linearly correlated with the angle of the diagonal motion. These results revealed that the Drosophila visual system employs a composite coding for diagonal motion that includes both independent coding and vector decomposition coding. |
url |
http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5047565?pdf=render |
work_keys_str_mv |
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