The optokinetic nystagmus is a gaze-stabilizing mechanism reducing motion blur by rapid eye rotations against the direction of visual motion, followed by slower syndirectional eye movements minimizing retinal slip speed. Flies control their gaze through head turns controlled by neck motor neurons receiving input directly, or via descending neurons, from well-characterized directional-selective interneurons sensitive to visual wide-field motion. Locomotion increases the gain and speed sensitivity of these interneurons, while visual motion adaptation in walking animals has the opposite effects. To find out whether flies perform an optokinetic nystagmus, and how it may be affected by locomotion and visual motion adaptation, we recorded head mo...
Kress D, Egelhaaf M. Gaze characteristics of freely walking blowflies Calliphora vicina in a goal-di...
For sensory signals to control an animal's behavior, they must first be transformed into a format ap...
Sensory neurons are mostly studied in fixed animals, but their response properties might change when...
Flying insects use compensatory head movements to stabilize gaze. Like other optokinetic responses, ...
Flying insects use compensatory head movements to stabilize gaze. Like other optokinetic responses, ...
Flying insects, like many other animals that rely on their sense of vision to guide behaviour, have ...
The stabilization of gaze may involve multiple sensory systems. In blowflies, the reflex depends on ...
Hoverflies and blowflies have distinctly different flight styles. Yet, both species have been shown ...
In flying insects the stabilization of gaze aids visual processing by reducing motion blur, for inst...
The stabilization of gaze may involve multiple sensory systems. In blowflies, two visual pathways pr...
Motion adaptation has been attributed in flying insects a pivotal functional role in spatial vision ...
Flies move their eyes by turning their heads either spontaneously or in response to unexpected distu...
For sensory signals to control an animal’s behavior, they must first be transformed into a format ap...
Kress D, Egelhaaf M. Head and body stabilization in blowflies walking on differently structured subs...
In blowflies, two visual systems input to the gaze stabilization system: the motion vision pathway p...
Kress D, Egelhaaf M. Gaze characteristics of freely walking blowflies Calliphora vicina in a goal-di...
For sensory signals to control an animal's behavior, they must first be transformed into a format ap...
Sensory neurons are mostly studied in fixed animals, but their response properties might change when...
Flying insects use compensatory head movements to stabilize gaze. Like other optokinetic responses, ...
Flying insects use compensatory head movements to stabilize gaze. Like other optokinetic responses, ...
Flying insects, like many other animals that rely on their sense of vision to guide behaviour, have ...
The stabilization of gaze may involve multiple sensory systems. In blowflies, the reflex depends on ...
Hoverflies and blowflies have distinctly different flight styles. Yet, both species have been shown ...
In flying insects the stabilization of gaze aids visual processing by reducing motion blur, for inst...
The stabilization of gaze may involve multiple sensory systems. In blowflies, two visual pathways pr...
Motion adaptation has been attributed in flying insects a pivotal functional role in spatial vision ...
Flies move their eyes by turning their heads either spontaneously or in response to unexpected distu...
For sensory signals to control an animal’s behavior, they must first be transformed into a format ap...
Kress D, Egelhaaf M. Head and body stabilization in blowflies walking on differently structured subs...
In blowflies, two visual systems input to the gaze stabilization system: the motion vision pathway p...
Kress D, Egelhaaf M. Gaze characteristics of freely walking blowflies Calliphora vicina in a goal-di...
For sensory signals to control an animal's behavior, they must first be transformed into a format ap...
Sensory neurons are mostly studied in fixed animals, but their response properties might change when...