Visual neurons in the pigeon brain encode the acceleration of stimulus motion

被引:28
|
作者
Cao, P
Gu, Y
Wang, SR
机构
[1] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Biophys, Lab Visual Informat Proc, Beijing 100101, Peoples R China
[2] Chinese Acad Sci, Grad Sch, Beijing 100101, Peoples R China
来源
JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE | 2004年 / 24卷 / 35期
关键词
acceleration; optokinetic nystagmus; receptive field; speed-tuning curve; vestibular system; visual system;
D O I
10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2384-04.2004
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Seeing target motion is a vital capability of the visual system in humans and animals. Physically, motion is described by its acceleration, speed, and direction. Motion-sensitive neurons in all the visual areas examined to date are selective for the direction and speed of motion. Here, we show by single-unit recording that one-third of motion-sensitive neurons in the pigeon's pretectal nucleus also encode the acceleration of stimulus motion. These neurons are characterized by plateau-shaped speed-tuning curves in which the firing rate is the same over a wide range of speeds, a feature that allows these neurons to encode unambiguously the rate of change of speed over time. Acceleration-sensitive neurons also show transient responses to the offset of motion in the preferred and/or nonpreferred directions; acceleration-insensitive neurons do not. We observed the same sensitivity to target acceleration for brief ramps of stimulus speed and for sinusoidal modulation of speed. The locations of acceleration-sensitive and -insensitive neurons are segregated in the pretectal nucleus. The visual responses of pretectal neurons indicate that the visual and vestibular systems share not only a spatial but also a temporal reference frame that can detect the acceleration produced by self-motion of an organism.
引用
收藏
页码:7690 / 7698
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] NEURONS IN THE LOCUST VISUAL-SYSTEM WHICH ENCODE ACCELERATION AND ARE DIRECTIONALLY SELECTIVE FOR MOTION IN DEPTH
    RIND, FC
    SIMMONS, PJ
    [J]. JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON, 1990, 429 : P71 - P71
  • [2] Effect of the stimulus size on the human brain response to visual motion
    Urakawa, Tomokazu
    Kaneoke, Yoshiki
    Tanaka, Emi
    Kakigi, Ryusuke
    [J]. NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH, 2007, 58 : S216 - S216
  • [3] Diverse coactive neurons encode stimulus-driven and stimulus-independent variables
    Xia, Ji
    Marks, Tyler D.
    Goard, Michael J.
    Wessel, Ralf
    [J]. JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 2020, 124 (05) : 1505 - 1517
  • [4] Modeling the acceleration sensitive neurons in the pigeon optokinetic system
    Zhang, C
    Wang, YJ
    Qi, XL
    [J]. BIOLOGICAL CYBERNETICS, 2005, 92 (04) : 252 - 260
  • [5] Modeling the acceleration sensitive neurons in the pigeon optokinetic system
    Chuan Zhang
    Yun-Jiu Wang
    Xiang-Lin Qi
    [J]. Biological Cybernetics, 2005, 92 : 252 - 260
  • [6] Single Neurons in the Human Brain Encode Numbers
    Kutter, Esther F.
    Bostroem, Jan
    Elger, Christian E.
    Mormann, Florian
    Nieder, Andreas
    [J]. NEURON, 2018, 100 (03) : 753 - +
  • [7] VISUAL RESPONSE PATTERN OF THALAMIC NEURONS IN PIGEON
    ROBERTOGIORGETTIDEBRITTO, L
    BRUNELLI, M
    FRANCESCONI, W
    MAGNI, F
    [J]. BRAIN RESEARCH, 1975, 97 (02) : 337 - 343
  • [8] Precise discrimination of stimulus position in visual object and motion regions of the human brain
    Whitney, D.
    Spotswood, N.
    Louie, E.
    [J]. PERCEPTION, 2007, 36 : 5 - 5
  • [9] NEURONS IN CAT VISUAL-CORTEX TUNED TO THE DIRECTION OF MOTION IN DEPTH - EFFECT OF STIMULUS SPEED
    REGAN, D
    CYNADER, M
    [J]. INVESTIGATIVE OPHTHALMOLOGY & VISUAL SCIENCE, 1982, 22 (04) : 535 - 550
  • [10] Adaptation accentuates responses of fly motion-sensitive visual neurons to sudden stimulus changes
    Kurtz, Rafael
    Egelhaaf, Martin
    Meyer, Hanno Gerd
    Kern, Roland
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2009, 276 (1673) : 3711 - 3719