Visual receptive field properties of feature detecting neurons in the dragonfly
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] T E Sherk,et al. Development of the compound eyes of dragonflies (Odonata). III. Adult compound eyes. , 1977, The Journal of experimental zoology.
[2] C. Wehrhahn,et al. Neural circuits mediating visual flight control in flies. II. Separation of two control systems by microsurgical brain lesions , 1990, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.
[3] Jeffrey W. Harris,et al. Effects of stress, age, season, and source colony on levels of octopamine, dopamine and serotonin in the honey bee (Apis mellifera L.) brain , 1992 .
[4] Cole Gilbert,et al. Small‐field neurons associated with oculomotor and optomotor control in muscoid flies: Functional organization , 1992, The Journal of comparative neurology.
[5] Robert M. Olberg,et al. Parallel encoding of direction of wind, head, abdomen, and visual pattern movement by single interneurons in the dragonfly , 1981, Journal of comparative physiology.
[6] N. Strausfeld,et al. Small‐field neurons associated with oculomotor control in muscoid flies: Cellular organization in the lobula plate , 1992, The Journal of comparative neurology.
[7] K Hausen,et al. Neural circuits mediating visual flight control in flies. I. Quantitative comparison of neural and behavioral response characteristics , 1989, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.
[8] Martin Egelhaaf,et al. Dynamic properties of two control systems underlying visually guided turning in house-flies , 1987, Journal of Comparative Physiology A.
[9] Heinrich Reichert,et al. Course correction circuitry translates feature detection into behavioral action , 1985 .
[10] Martin Egelhaaf,et al. Neural Mechanisms of Visual Course Control in Insects , 1989 .
[11] David O'Carroll,et al. Feature-detecting neurons in dragonflies , 1993, Nature.
[12] Martin Egelhaaf. On the neuronal basis of figure-ground discrimination by relative motion in the visual system of the fly. 2: Figure-dectection cells, a new class of visual interneurones , 1985 .
[13] Robert M. Olberg,et al. Is the Locust DCMD A Looming Detector , 1982 .
[14] N. Strausfeld,et al. Neuronal basis for parallel visual processing in the fly , 1991, Visual Neuroscience.
[15] T. Collett,et al. How hoverflies compute interception courses , 1978, Journal of comparative physiology.
[16] Werner Reichardt,et al. Figure-ground discrimination by relative movement in the visual system of the fly , 2004, Biological Cybernetics.
[17] Robert M. Olberg,et al. Identified target-selective visual interneurons descending from the dragonfly brain , 1986, Journal of Comparative Physiology A.
[18] R. Olberg. Visual and multimodal interneurons in dragonflies , 1978 .
[19] W. Reichardt,et al. Detection and tracking of moving objects by the fly Musca domestica , 1976, Biological Cybernetics.
[20] S. Zhang,et al. Visual tracking of moving targets by freely flying honeybees , 1990, Visual Neuroscience.
[21] Dynamic Properties of Orientation to a Visually Fixated Target by Walking Colorado Beetles , 1991 .
[22] P. Simmons,et al. Orthopteran DCMD neuron: a reevaluation of responses to moving objects. I. Selective responses to approaching objects. , 1992, Journal of neurophysiology.
[23] Robert M. Olberg,et al. Object- and self-movement detectors in the ventral nerve cord of the dragonfly , 1981, Journal of comparative physiology.
[24] M. Egelhaaf. On the neuronal basis of figure-ground discrimination by relative motion in the visual system of the fly , 1985 .
[25] F C Rind,et al. Orthopteran DCMD neuron: a reevaluation of responses to moving objects. II. Critical cues for detecting approaching objects. , 1992, Journal of neurophysiology.
[26] G. Geiger,et al. Visual processing of moving single objects and wide-field patterns in flies: Behavioural analysis after laser-surgical removal of interneurons , 1982, Biological Cybernetics.
[27] Samuel Rossel,et al. Foveal fixation and tracking in the praying mantis , 1980, Journal of comparative physiology.
[28] W. Gronenberg,et al. Premotor descending neurons responding selectively to local visual stimuli in flies , 1992, The Journal of comparative neurology.
[29] M. Egelhaaf. On the neuronal basis of figure-ground discrimination by relative motion in the visual system of the fly , 1985 .