IFIBYNE   05513
INSTITUTO DE FISIOLOGIA, BIOLOGIA MOLECULAR Y NEUROCIENCIAS
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
A network of visual motion-sensitive neurons for computing object position in an arthropod.
Autor/es:
TOMSIC D.; MEDAN V; BERÓN DE ASTRADA M; SCARANO F.
Lugar:
Virginia
Reunión:
Workshop; Insects Vision. Janelia Farm Conferences; 2015
Institución organizadora:
Howard Huges Medical Institutes
Resumen:
Highly active insects and crabs depend on visual motion information for detecting and tracking mates, preys or predators, for which they require directional control systems containing internal maps of visual space. A neural map formed by large motion-sensitive neurons implicated in processing panoramic flow is known to exist in an optic ganglion of the fly. But an equivalent map for processing spatial positions of single objects has not been hitherto identified in any arthropod. Crabs can escape directly away from a visual threat wherever the stimulus is located in the 360° field of view. When tested in a walking simulator the crab Neohelice immediately adjusts its running direction following changes in the position of the visual danger stimulus smaller than 1°. Combining mass and single cell staining with in vivo intracellular recording, we show that a particular class of motion-sensitive neurons of the crab´s lobula that project to the midbrain, the monostratified lobula giants type 1 (MLG1), form a system of 16 retinotopically organized elements that map the 360° azimuthal space. The preference of these neurons for horizontally moving objects conforms the visual ecology of the crab´s mudflat world. With a mean receptive field of 118°, MLG1s have a large superposition among neighboring elements. Our results suggest that the MLG1 system conveys information on object position as a population vector. Such computational code can enable the accurate directional control observed in the visually guided behaviors of crabs.