Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Department of Integrative Biology and Physiology, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA.
Curr Biol. 2013 Aug 19;23(16):R694-700. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2013.07.022.
Visually-guided animals rely on their ability to stabilize the panorama and simultaneously track salient objects, or figures, that are distinct from the background in order to avoid predators, pursue food resources and mates, and navigate spatially. Visual figures are distinguished by luminance signals that produce coherent motion cues as well as more enigmatic 'higher-order' statistical features. Figure discrimination is thus a complex form of motion vision requiring specialized neural processing. In this minireview, we will highlight recent advances in understanding the perceptual, behavioral, and neurophysiological basis of higher-order figure detection in flies, much of which is grounded in the historical perspective and mechanistic underpinnings of human psychophysics.
视觉引导的动物依赖于它们稳定全景的能力,同时跟踪与背景明显不同的显著物体或图形,以避免捕食者、寻找食物资源和配偶,并在空间中导航。视觉图形的特征是亮度信号,这些信号产生连贯的运动线索以及更神秘的“高阶”统计特征。因此,图形识别是一种复杂的运动视觉形式,需要专门的神经处理。在这篇小综述中,我们将强调理解苍蝇中高阶图形检测的感知、行为和神经生理学基础的最新进展,其中大部分基于人类心理物理学的历史观点和机制基础。