Lawson Kiaran K K, Srinivasan Mandyam V
Queensland Brain Institute, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, QLD 4072, Australia
School of Information Technology and Electrical Engineering, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, QLD 4072, Australia.
J Exp Biol. 2017 Jun 1;220(Pt 11):2005-2016. doi: 10.1242/jeb.153056. Epub 2017 Mar 17.
Insects are magnificent fliers that are capable of performing many complex tasks such as speed regulation, smooth landings and collision avoidance, even though their computational abilities are limited by their small brain. To investigate how flying insects respond to changes in wind speed and surrounding optic flow, the open-loop sensorimotor response of female Queensland fruit flies () was examined. A total of 136 flies were exposed to stimuli comprising sinusoidally varying optic flow and air flow (simulating forward movement) under tethered conditions in a virtual reality arena. Two responses were measured: the thrust and the abdomen pitch. The dynamics of the responses to optic flow and air flow were measured at various frequencies, and modelled as a multicompartment linear system, which accurately captured the behavioural responses of the fruit flies. The results indicate that these two behavioural responses are concurrently sensitive to changes of optic flow as well as wind. The abdomen pitch showed a streamlining response, where the abdomen was raised higher as the magnitude of either stimulus was increased. The thrust, in contrast, exhibited a counter-phase response where maximum thrust occurred when the optic flow or wind flow was at a minimum, indicating that the flies were attempting to maintain an ideal flight speed. When the changes in the wind and optic flow were in phase (i.e. did not contradict each other), the net responses (thrust and abdomen pitch) were well approximated by an equally weighted sum of the responses to the individual stimuli. However, when the optic flow and wind stimuli were presented in counterphase, the flies seemed to respond to only one stimulus or the other, demonstrating a form of 'selective attention'.
昆虫是出色的飞行者,尽管它们的计算能力受到其小脑袋的限制,但仍能够执行许多复杂任务,如速度调节、平稳着陆和避免碰撞。为了研究飞行昆虫如何应对风速变化和周围的视觉流,研究人员检测了雌性昆士兰果蝇的开环感觉运动反应。在虚拟现实环境中,研究人员在系留条件下,让总共136只果蝇暴露于由正弦变化的视觉流和气流(模拟向前运动)组成的刺激中。测量了两种反应:推力和腹部俯仰。在不同频率下测量了对视觉流和气流反应的动态,并将其建模为多室线性系统,该系统准确地捕捉了果蝇的行为反应。结果表明,这两种行为反应对视觉流和风速的变化同时敏感。腹部俯仰表现出一种流线型反应,即随着任何一种刺激强度的增加,腹部抬得更高。相比之下,推力表现出反相反应,即当视觉流或气流最小时出现最大推力,这表明果蝇试图保持理想的飞行速度。当风和视觉流的变化同相(即不相互矛盾)时,净反应(推力和腹部俯仰)可以很好地用对单个刺激反应的等加权和来近似。然而,当视觉流和风刺激呈反相呈现时,果蝇似乎只对其中一种刺激做出反应,表现出一种“选择性注意”形式。