The wing blade of the blowfly Calliphora vomitoria (L.) carries an array of campaniform sensilla which have previously been divided into slowly and rapidly adapting classes based on their responses to step indentations. In the present study, the physiological characteristics of six sensilla of these two classes are examined within a 20–400 Hz frequency range, using a noise analysis that quantifies linear and nonlinear encoding properties. Both classes exhibit a broad response maximum near 150 Hz, corresponding to the typical wingbeat frequency of the blowfly, and display rectification, limiting the spike response to a narrow portion of a stimulus cycle. The similarity in the encoding properties between the two groups is largely a consequenc...
The first basalar muscle (B1) is 1 of 17 small steering muscles in flies that control changes in win...
Flying insects rely heavily on mechanoreception for flight control. True flies use halteres to prov...
The motion-sensitive horizontal cells in the lobula plate of the fly are assumed to play a key role ...
The wing blade of the blowfly Calliphora vomitoria (L.) carries an array of campaniform sensilla whi...
The wing blades of most flies contain a small set of distal campaniform sensilla, mechanoreceptors t...
The wing blades of most flies contain a small set of distal campaniform sensilla, mechanoreceptors t...
Flying insects use feedback from various sensory modalities including vision and mechanosensation to...
Insects collect and process information from their environment using a host of sensory modalities t...
The complex morphology of an insect campaniform sensillum is responsible for transforming strains of...
Rhythmic locomotor behavior in animals requires exact timing of muscle activation within the locomot...
Campaniform sensilla have been described from the wings, mouthparts, legs, and other parts of the in...
In sensory systems information is encoded by the activity of populations of neurons. To analyze the ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2015Flying insects rapidly stabilize after perturbations u...
The first basalar muscle (b1) is one of 17 small muscles in flies that control changes in wing strok...
The motion-sensitive horizontal cells in the lobula plate of the fly are assumed to play a key role ...
The first basalar muscle (B1) is 1 of 17 small steering muscles in flies that control changes in win...
Flying insects rely heavily on mechanoreception for flight control. True flies use halteres to prov...
The motion-sensitive horizontal cells in the lobula plate of the fly are assumed to play a key role ...
The wing blade of the blowfly Calliphora vomitoria (L.) carries an array of campaniform sensilla whi...
The wing blades of most flies contain a small set of distal campaniform sensilla, mechanoreceptors t...
The wing blades of most flies contain a small set of distal campaniform sensilla, mechanoreceptors t...
Flying insects use feedback from various sensory modalities including vision and mechanosensation to...
Insects collect and process information from their environment using a host of sensory modalities t...
The complex morphology of an insect campaniform sensillum is responsible for transforming strains of...
Rhythmic locomotor behavior in animals requires exact timing of muscle activation within the locomot...
Campaniform sensilla have been described from the wings, mouthparts, legs, and other parts of the in...
In sensory systems information is encoded by the activity of populations of neurons. To analyze the ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2015Flying insects rapidly stabilize after perturbations u...
The first basalar muscle (b1) is one of 17 small muscles in flies that control changes in wing strok...
The motion-sensitive horizontal cells in the lobula plate of the fly are assumed to play a key role ...
The first basalar muscle (B1) is 1 of 17 small steering muscles in flies that control changes in win...
Flying insects rely heavily on mechanoreception for flight control. True flies use halteres to prov...
The motion-sensitive horizontal cells in the lobula plate of the fly are assumed to play a key role ...