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CBMM | Quest: Brains, Minds, and Machines Seminar
How fly neurons compute the direction of visual motion

Alexander Borst, Max-Planck-Institute of Neurobiology, Martinsried, Germany

Tuesday, March 22 | 2:00 p.m.
representation of neuron, fly, and abacus

How fly neurons compute the direction of visual motion

Speaker: Alexander Borst, Max-Planck-Institute of Neurobiology, Martinsried, Germany

Location: This talk will be fully remote via Zoom Webinar.

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, involving a comparison of the signals from neighboring photoreceptors over time. The exact nature of this process represents a classic example of neural computation and has been a longstanding question in the field. Only recently, much progress has been made in the fruit fly Drosophila by genetically targeting individual neuron types to block, activate or record from them. Our results obtained this way 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.

Please click the link below to join the webinar:

https://mit.zoom.us/j/99216860152?pwd=VDJpcXF2OWtPZ0ZJTk1oNm9BSk9IUT09

Passcode: 691430

Speakers

  • Alexander Borst

    Alexander Borst

    Max-Planck-Institute of Neurobiology, Martinsried, Germany

Schedule

Seminar

Seminar Organizers

Organized by the Center for Brains, Minds, and Machines