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Journal of Experimental Biology 50,723-732 (1969)
Published by Company of Biologists 1969


Discrimination Between Movements of Eye and Object by Visual Interneurones of Crickets

JOHN PALKA 1

1 Department of Biology, Rice University, Houston, Texas 77001

1. One large neurone on each side of the cervical and thoracic ventral nerve cord of crickets responds to object motion anywhere in the visual field of the ipsilateral compound eye, but not to the forced or voluntary movement of the eye itself.

2. This discrimination between self-movement and object-movement is accomplished by an inhibitory mechanism mediated by the same eye.

3. Inhibition must be present because a potent moving stimulus becomes ineffective if presented during a forced eye movement.

4. Its visual origin is demonstrated in two ways: (a) abolishing all known mechanosensory feedback does not disrupt the mechanism, but (b) alteration of visual conditions does so in a predictable way. Sweeping the eye past a complex visual environment suppresses the neurone's response to a concurrently or subsequently presented moving target, whereas the same movement past a simplified or homogeneous environment produces little or no inhibition.

5. Responses to eye movement itself are greatly enhanced in appropriately simplified visual fields, reinforcing the conclusion that the inhibition preventing response in complex fields is of visual origin.

6. Suggestive evidence for an additional inhibitory mechanism associated with voluntary movement is presented.

Submitted on September 11, 1968




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B. Bridgeman
Visual Receptive Fields Sensitive to Absolute and Relative Motion during Tracking
Science, December 8, 1972; 178(4065): 1106 - 1108.
[Abstract] [PDF]




© The Company of Biologists Ltd 1969