Interactions of local movement detectors enhance the detection of rotation. Optokinetic experiments with the rock crab,Pachygrapsus marmoratus
- 1 July 1993
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Maximum Academic Press in Visual Neuroscience
- Vol. 10 (4) , 643-652
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0952523800005344
Abstract
Walking crabs move their eyes to compensate for retinal image motion only during rotation and not during translation, even when both components are superimposed. We tested in the rock crab,Pachygrapsus marmoratus, whether this ability to decompose optic flow may arise from topographical interactions of local movement detectors. We recorded the optokinetic eye movements of the rock crab in a sinusoidally oscillating drum which carried two 10-deg wide black vertical stripes. Their azimuthal separation varied from 20 to 180 deg, and each two-stripe configuration was presented at different azimuthal positions around the crab. In general, the responses are the stronger the more widely the stripes are separated. Furthermore, the response amplitude depends also strongly on the azimuthal positions of the stripes. We propose a model with excitatory interactions between pairs of movement detectors that quantitatively accounts for the enhanced optokinetic responses to widely separated textured patches in the visual field that move in phase. The interactions take place both within one eye and, predominantly, between both eyes. We conclude that these interactions aid in the detection of rotation.Keywords
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- Separation of translation and rotation by means of eye-region specialization in flying gypsy moths (Lepidoptera: Lymantriidae)Journal of Insect Behavior, 1991
- Binocular neurons in the nucleus of the basal optic root (nBOR) of the pigeon are selective for either translational or rotational visual flowVisual Neuroscience, 1990
- Processing differential image motionJournal of the Optical Society of America A, 1985
- Information in optical flows induced by curved paths of observationJournal of the Optical Society of America, 1983
- The interpretation of a moving retinal imageProceedings of the Royal Society of London. B. Biological Sciences, 1980
- A simple apparatus to investigate the orientation of walking insectsCellular and Molecular Life Sciences, 1980
- Continuous registration of X, Y-coordinates and angular position in behavioural experimentsCellular and Molecular Life Sciences, 1977
- Local structure of movement parallax of the planeJournal of the Optical Society of America, 1976
- Efferent visual responses of contralateral origin in the optic nerve of the crab PodophthalmusJournal of Cellular and Comparative Physiology, 1964
- Afferent visual responses in the optic nerve of the crab, PodophthalmusJournal of Cellular and Comparative Physiology, 1964