Eye-specific detection and a multi-eye integration model of biological motion perception

Author:

De Agrò Massimo123ORCID,Rößler Daniela C.456ORCID,Shamble Paul S.78ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Regensburg 1 Faculty of Biology , , 93053 Regensburg , Germany

2. University of Florence 2 Department of Biology , , 50121 Firenze , Italy

3. The BioRobotics Institute, Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies 3 , 56127 Pisa , Italy

4. Zukunftskolleg, Konstanz University 4 , 78464 Konstanz , Germany

5. Konstanz University 5 Department of Biology , , 78464 Konstanz , Germany

6. Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior 6 Department of Ecology of Animal Societies , , 78464 Konstanz , Germany

7. Kavli Institute for Neuroscience 7 , Department of Neuroscience , , New Haven, CT 06510 , USA

8. Yale University School of Medicine 7 , Department of Neuroscience , , New Haven, CT 06510 , USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT ‘Biological motion’ refers to the distinctive kinematics observed in many living organisms, where visually perceivable points on the animal move at fixed distances from each other. Across the animal kingdom, many species have developed specialized visual circuitry to recognize such biological motion and to discriminate it from other patterns. Recently, this ability has been observed in the distributed visual system of jumping spiders. These eight-eyed animals use six eyes to perceive motion, while the remaining two (the principal anterior medial eyes) are shifted across the visual scene to further inspect detected objects. When presented with a biologically moving stimulus and a random one, jumping spiders turn to face the latter, clearly demonstrating the ability to discriminate between them. However, it remains unclear whether the principal eyes are necessary for this behavior, whether all secondary eyes can perform this discrimination, or whether a single eye-pair is specialized for this task. Here, we systematically tested the ability of jumping spiders to discriminate between biological and random visual stimuli by testing each eye-pair alone. Spiders were able to discriminate stimuli only when the anterior lateral eyes were unblocked, and performed at chance levels in other configurations. Interestingly, spiders showed a preference for biological motion over random stimuli – unlike in past work. We therefore propose a new model describing how specialization of the anterior lateral eyes for detecting biological motion contributes to multi-eye integration in this system. This integration generates more complex behavior through the combination of simple, single-eye responses. We posit that this in-built modularity may be a solution to the limited resources of these invertebrates' brains, constituting a novel approach to visual processing.

Funder

Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour

University of Regensburg

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Cited by 1 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Jumping spider front-side eyes distinguish animal manoeuvres;Journal of Experimental Biology;2024-06-15

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