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11.
Compensatory optomotor reflexes were examined in crayfish (Procambarus clarkii) with oscillating sine wave gratings and step displacements of a single stripe. A capacitance transducer was used to measure the rotation of the eyestalk about its longitudinal axis. System studies reveal a spatial frequency response independent of velocity and stimulus amplitude and linear contrast sensitivity similar to that of neurons in the visual pathway. The reflex operates at low temporal frequencies (<0.002 Hz to 0.5 Hz) and exhibits a low-pass temporal frequency response with cut-off frequency of 0.1 Hz. Eyestalk rotation increases as a saturable function of the angular stimulus displacement. When compared to the oscillatory response, transient responses are faster, and they exhibit a lower gain for large stimulus displacements. These differences may reflect system nonlinearity and/or the presence of at least two classes of afferents in the visual pathway. Our metric for information transmission is the Kullback-Leibler (K-L) distance, which is inversely proportional to the probability of an error in distinguishing two stimuli. K-L distances are related to differences in responsiveness for variations in spatial frequency, contrast, and angular displacement. The results are interpreted in terms of the neural filters that shape the system response and the constraints that the K-L distances place on information transmission in the afferent visual pathway.  相似文献   
12.
The upwind zigzag flights of male gypsy moths (Lymantria dispar L.; Lepidoptera: Lymantriidae) along narrow, ribbon‐like and wide, turbulent plumes of pheromone were examined in a wind tunnel at light levels of 450 and 4 lux. Under all conditions tested males flew upwind zigzag paths. In 450 lux, males flying along turbulent plumes had the highest ground speeds and the widest crosswind excursions between counterturns, compared to slow flight and a narrow zigzag of males along a ribbon plume. In a turbulent plume, males flew more slowly and had narrower zigzags in 4 than in 450 lux. Across most treatments of plume structure and light level, the rate of transverse image flow and the frequency of counterturning remained relatively constant. The effects of light levels on orientation are not readily reconcilable with a model in which moths in low light levels would head more towards crosswind, thereby enhancing the rate of transverse image flow and the perception of wind‐induced drift.  相似文献   
13.
Stabilizing responses to sideslip disturbances are a critical part of the flight control system in flies. While strongly mediated by mechanoreception, much of the final response results from the wide-field motion detection system associated with vision. In order to be effective, these responses must match the disturbance they are aimed to correct. To do this, flies must estimate the velocity of the disturbance, although it is not known how they accomplish this task when presented with natural images or dot fields. The recent finding, that motion parallax in dot fields can modulate stabilizing responses only if perceived below the fly, raises the question of whether other image statistics are also processed differently between eye regions. One such parameter is the density of elements moving in translational optic flow. Depending on the habitat, there might be strong differences in the density of elements providing information about self-motion above and below the fly, which in turn could act as selective pressures tuning the visual system to process this parameter on a regional basis. By presenting laterally moving dot fields of different densities we found that, in Drosophila melanogaster, the amplitude of the stabilizing response is significantly affected by the number of elements in the field of view. Flies countersteer strongly within a relatively low and narrow range of element densities. But this effect is exclusive to the ventral region of the eye, and dorsal stimuli elicit an unaltered and stereotypical response regardless of the density of elements in the flow. This highlights local specialization of the eye and suggests the lower region may play a more critical role in translational flight stabilization.  相似文献   
14.
Microspectrophotometry (MSP) revealed the presence of a rod and at least two cone classes (mid‐ and long‐wavelength sensitive) in the intertidal peacock blenny Salaria pavo . Both rhodopsin and porphyropsin based visual pigments were found in all fish, together with high individual variation in the chromophore ratio. The three morphs (females, males and sneaker males) differed in their spectral sensitivities (as measured with the optomotor response) with sneakers having higher sensitivity at long‐wavelengths than either males or females. This long‐wave displacement of peak sensitivity could be due to elevated proportions of porphyropsin visual pigments in the sneakers' retinae. The lenses of all morphs exhibited a short‐wavelength cut‐off and an unusual layer of carotenoid was found behind the retinal pigment epithelium and in the outer segments of some cones. These screening pigments could serve a photo‐protective role or to improve visual contrast. No short‐wave photoreceptors were located using MSP. This indicates that this cone class may be absent or present at very low numbers in the retina. This is the first in depth study of the visual system of a blenniid fish and indicates potential within‐species visual variation that may be related to the species' habitat and morph‐specific behavioural requirements.  相似文献   
15.
Associating quantitative genetic traits with quantitative behaviors is a relatively unexplored region of sensory neurobiology. The visual system is an ideal place to test models associating these levels of sensory perception. In this study, we reared cichlid fish from Lake Malawi in different ambient light environments. We then tested the visual sensitivities of these fish using the optomotor response (OMR) behavioral paradigm and measured the relative expression of cone opsin genes. We found that the light environment experienced by fish during development can alter gene expression, particularly as it applies to the long wavelength-sensitive (LWS) opsin gene. Also, fish from different rearing conditions exhibited different behavioral sensitivities. We combined these data with predictions of opsin pigment absorption by the different OMR stimuli to determine which cone types are most likely to influence the OMR behavior. While we hypothesized that this behavior would be controlled by a random-wiring model reflecting the expression of both medium wavelength-sensitive (MWS) and LWS opsins, our models suggest that only the LWS pigment is required to predict behavior. Furthermore, analyses show that LWS expression variation accounts for ~20% of the observed behavioral variance. This work confirms that sensory gene expression influences behavior in a predictable fashion. It also suggests that the neural wiring of basal visual pathways in cichlid fish may differ from that observed in mammals and zebrafish, but is similar to that described in goldfish. This finding has important implications for the evolution of the magnocellular neural pathway in teleosts.  相似文献   
16.
17.
Direction-sensitive partitioning of the honeybee optomotor system   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
ABSTRACT. The horizontal motion-detecting system controlling optomotor head-turning behaviour in honeybees, Apis mellifera , was found to be partitioned into two separate subsystems. Each subsystem is direction-specific such that visual stimulation in the preferred direction elicited a high level of responses that correcly followed the movement, whereas stimulation in the non-preferred direction resulted in response levels comparable to or lower than those for blinded controls. The results indicate that medial eye regions are specialized for the detection of posterior-to-anterior movements and lateral regions are specialized for detecting anterior-to-posterior motion. A model suggesting possible neural correlates for this functional subdivision of the optomotor response is proposed.  相似文献   
18.
A partial functional specialization of eye regions in the visual control of flight was studied in male gypsy moths, Lymantria dispar,under open-loop conditions. When stimulated by means of a rotating striped drum, surrounding either the moth 's longitudinal or its transverse body axis, the induced torque response was always such as to compensate for a simulated translatory disturbance of flight, if the stimulus was restricted to the ventral visual field. If restricted to the lateral visual field(s), the response was always such as to compensate for a simulated rotatory disturbance. Though the conclusions refer to only a limited subset of visual stimuli the moths experience during free flight, the induced responses give reason to suppose that at least some of the simultaneous control of translation and rotation in free flight is based on a regional specialization of the compound eye.  相似文献   
19.
In tethered flying locusts, optomotor thrust responses induced by translatory pattern motion within the lateral visual fields were studied under closed-loop conditions. By modulating thrust in a compensatory manner, locusts counteracted a bias motion superposed on the thrust-related motion. This way, pattern speed was kept at 0° s–1, indicating the set point of the respective optomotor control circuit. Though the quality of bias compensation varied greatly, it was largely independent from pattern characteristics. It might indicate that the gain of behavior not only is controlled by an automatic mechanism but also is affected by spontaneous modulations. Compensation of bias motion was critically dependent on the relation between self- and bias-generated motion: Locusts did not take control over pattern motion if self- and bias-generated motion differed greatly. Instead, locusts adopted a constant, supposingly preferred, thrust value. Therefore, flight speed is assumed to be controlled by two systems: the optomotor and a preferred thrust system. In free flight, an equalization of the flight speed of locusts within a swarm might result from similar behavior. In combination with a presumed coordination of the locusts' course direction, this may explain the continued cohesion of swarms in the field.  相似文献   
20.
ABSTRACT. Flying male spruce budworm ( Choristoneura fumiferana [Clem.]) moths responding to virgin females and to synthetic pheromone in a wind tunnel maintained a constant rate of upwind progress when held by moving optomotor cues at a constant distance from the pheromone source. When allowed to progress upwind to the source, however, they slowed their upwind speed progressively as they approached it. They also adjusted their flight speed to maintain similar rates of upwind progress at different wind speeds.  相似文献   
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