Dual receptive fields underlying target and wide-field motion sensitivity in looming sensitive descending neurons
收藏DataONE2024-03-24 更新2024-06-08 收录
下载链接:
https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:0cbb167f0b7dc842dda661b529f563d1ffc6cc552436ceee16789a501fc343f5
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
Responding rapidly to visual stimuli is fundamental for many animals. For example, predatory birds and insects alike have amazing target detection abilities, with incredibly short neural and behavioral delays, enabling efficient prey capture. Similarly, looming objects need to be rapidly avoided to ensure immediate survival, as these could represent approaching predators. Male Eristalis tenax hoverflies are nonpredatory, highly territorial insects that perform high-speed pursuits of conspecifics and other territorial intruders. During the initial stages of the pursuit, the retinal projection of the target is very small, but this grows to a larger object before physical interaction. Supporting such behaviors, E. tenax and other insects have both target-tuned and loom-sensitive neurons in the optic lobes and the descending pathways. We here show that these visual stimuli are not necessarily encoded in parallel. Indeed, we describe a class of descending neurons that respond to small target..., This is described in detail in the README file as well as the methods of the paper., ,
创建时间:
2025-07-29



