Abstract
SummaryDiverse sensory systems, from audition to thermosensation, feature a separation of inputs into ON (increments) and OFF (decrements) signals. In the Drosophila visual system, separate ON and OFF pathways compute the direction of motion, yet anatomical and functional studies have identified some crosstalk between these channels. We used this well-studied circuit to ask whether the motion computation depends on ON-OFF pathway crosstalk. Using whole-cell electrophysiology we recorded visual responses of T4 (ON) and T5 (OFF) cells and discovered that both cell types are also directionally selective in response to non-preferred contrast motion. We mapped T4s’ and T5s’ composite ON-OFF receptive fields and found they share a similar spatiotemporal structure. We fit a biophysical model to these receptive fields that accurately predicts directionally selective T4 and T5 responses to both ON and OFF moving stimuli. This model also provides a detailed mechanistic explanation for the directional-preference inversion in response to a prominent visual illusion, a result we corroborate with electrophysiological recordings and behavioral responses of flying flies.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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