Velocity constancy and models for wide-field visual motion detection in insects

Date

2005

Authors

Shoemaker, P.
O'Carroll, D.
Straw, A.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Biological Cybernetics, 2005; 93(4):275-287

Statement of Responsibility

P. A. Shoemaker, D. C. O’Carroll and A. D. Straw

Conference Name

Abstract

The tangential neurons in the lobula plate region of the flies are known to respond to visual motion across broad receptive fields in visual space.When intracellular recordings are made from tangential neurons while the intact animal is stimulated visually with moving natural imagery,we find that neural response depends upon speed of motion but is nearly invariant with respect to variations in natural scenery. We refer to this invariance as velocity constancy. It is remarkable because natural scenes, in spite of similarities in spatial structure, vary considerably in contrast, and contrast dependence is a feature of neurons in the early visual pathway as well as of most models for the elementary operations of visual motion detection. Thus, we expect that operations must be present in the processing pathway that reduce contrast dependence in order to approximate velocity constancy.We consider models for such operations, including spatial filtering, motion adaptation, saturating nonlinearities, and nonlinear spatial integration by the tangential neurons themselves, and evaluate their effects in simulations of a tangential neuron and precursor processing in response to animated natural imagery. We conclude that all such features reduce interscene variance in response, but that the model system does not approach velocity constancy as closely as the biological tangential cell.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

The original publication can be found at www.springerlink.com

Access Status

Rights

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record