Praying mantids are the only insects proven to have stereoscopic vision (stereopsis): the ability to perceive depth from the slightly shifted images seen by the two eyes. Recently, the first neurons likely to be involved in mantis stereopsis were described and a speculative neuronal circuit suggested. Here we further investigate classes of neurons in the lobula complex of the praying mantis brain and their tuning to stereoscopically-defined depth. We used sharp electrode recordings with tracer injections to identify visual projection neurons with input in the optic lobe and output in the central brain. In order to measure binocular response fields of the cells the animals watched a vertical bar stimulus in a 3D insect cinema during recordings. We describe the binocular tuning of 19 neurons projecting from the lobula complex and the medulla to central brain areas. The majority of neurons (12/19) were binocular and had receptive fields for both eyes that overlapped in the frontal region. Thus, these neurons could be involved in mantis stereopsis. We also find that neurons preferring different contrast polarity (bright vs dark) tend to be segregated in the mantis lobula complex, reminiscent of the segregation for small targets and widefield motion in mantids and other insects.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00359-020-01405-x | DOI Listing |
Biomimetics (Basel)
October 2024
Machine Life and Intelligence Research Centre, School of Mathematics and Information Science, Guangzhou University, Guangzhou 510006, China.
Animals utilize their well-evolved dynamic vision systems to perceive and evade collision threats. Driven by biological research, bio-inspired models based on lobula giant movement detectors (LGMDs) address certain gaps in constructing artificial collision-detecting vision systems with robust selectivity, offering reliable, low-cost, and miniaturized collision sensors across various scenes. Recent progress in neuroscience has revealed the energetic advantages of dendritic arrangements presynaptic to the LGMDs, which receive contrast polarity-specific signals on separate dendritic fields.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBioinspir Biomim
November 2024
Guangxi Key Laboratory of Intelligent Control and Maintenance of Power Equipment, School of Electrical Engineering, Guangxi University, Nanning 530004, People's Republic of China.
Bioinspir Biomim
August 2024
Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK, United States of America.
Despite progress developing experimentally-consistent models of insect in-flight sensing and feedback for individual agents, a lack of systematic understanding of the multi-agent and group performance of the resulting bio-inspired sensing and feedback approaches remains a barrier to robotic swarm implementations. This study introduces the small-target motion reactive (STMR) swarming approach by designing a concise engineering model of the small target motion detector (STMD) neurons found in insect lobula complexes. The STMD neuron model identifies the bearing angle at which peak optic flow magnitude occurs, and this angle is used to design an output feedback switched control system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBioinspir Biomim
July 2024
School of Life Sciences, Shanghai University, Shanghai 200444, People's Republic of China.
Flying insects rely mainly upon visual motion to detect and track objects. There has been a lot of research on fly inspired algorithms for object detection, but few have been developed based on visual motion alone. One of the daunting difficulties is that the neural and circuit mechanisms underlying the foreground-background segmentation are still unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIEEE Trans Biomed Eng
October 2024
Objective: Lobula giant motion detectors (LGMDs) in locusts effectively predict collisions and trigger avoidance, with potential applications in autonomous driving and UAVs. Research on LGMD characteristics splits into two views: one focusing on the presynaptic visual pathway, the other on the postsynaptic LGMD neurons. Both perspectives have support, leading to two computational models, but they lack a biophysical description of the individual LGMD neuron behavior.
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