Quest | CBMM Seminar Series: How fly neurons compute the direction of visual motion.

a fly on a tree link sructure February 14, 2024 - 2:00 pm to 3:30 pm
Speaker/s: 

Alexander Borst, Max-Planck-Institute for Biological Intelligence, Martinsried, Germany

Organizer: 

*Due to the forecast weather event for Cambridge, MA on Tuesday February 13th, this talk will be held on Wednesday February 14th at 2:00PM*

Abstract: Detecting the direction of image motion is important for visual navigation, predator avoidance and prey capture, and thus essential for the survival of all animals that have eyes. However, the direction of motion is not explicitly represented at the level of the photoreceptors: it rather needs to be computed by subsequent neural circuits. The exact nature of this process represents a classic example of neural computation and has been a longstanding question in the field. Our results obtained in the fruit fly Drosophila demonstrate that the local direction of motion is computed in two parallel ON and OFF pathways. Within each pathway, a retinotopic array of four direction-selective T4 (ON) and T5 (OFF) cells represents the four Cartesian components of local motion vectors (leftward, rightward, upward, downward). Since none of the presynaptic neurons is directionally selective, direction selectivity first emerges within T4 and T5 cells. Our present research focuses on the cellular and biophysical mechanisms by which the direction of image motion is computed in these neurons.

Details

MIT Building 46
Date: 
February 14, 2024
Time: 
2:00 pm to 3:30 pm
Venue: 
Singleton Auditorium (46-3002)