Sarah's latest paper is now out. In the paper she describes hoverfly descending neurons that respond to visual stimuli. She shows that they have overlapping response properties, meaning that one stimulus alone rarely gives a reliable answer to the type of neuron you're recording from. It's an extremely solid paper, showing receptive field data and responses to stimuli of different types (3D optic flow, targets, looming objects, sinusoidal gratings) making it a great foundation for our future work.
By Karin
Sarah's latest paper is now out. In the paper she describes hoverfly descending neurons that respond to visual stimuli. She shows that they have overlapping response properties, meaning that one stimulus alone rarely gives a reliable answer to the type of neuron you're recording from. It's an extremely solid paper, showing receptive field data and responses to stimuli of different types (3D optic flow, targets, looming objects, sinusoidal gratings) making it a great foundation for our future work.
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Hoverfly Vision
The hoverfly vision group can be found at 2 locations: At Flinders University in Adelaide, Australia, and at Uppsala University in Sweden. Archives
January 2022
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