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Behavioral components of prey capture in the frog

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1 Behavioral components of prey capture in the frog
1 2 3 4 2,3 none of the behavioral components are a necessary prerequisite for the others to occur: they are independent “FAPs” If these are FAPs in the true sense the lets find what controls its: Step 1 Find cell/s that recognize prey

2 Laboratory analysis of innate orientation behavior of toad to varying stimuli
Toad in glass jar above turntable Turntable used to pass targets in front of toad Results: Toad optimally responds to “worm-like” stimuli Worm must move along long axis but can move in any direction Orientation responses to worm are consistent FAPs “they are invariant.”

3 Sensory transduction: the eye

4 Sensory transduction: the retina
Rods and cones (toads rods only) Bipolar cells Amacrine cells Horizontal cells Ganglion cell Optic nerve (blind spot)

5 Sensory transduction: the retina

6 Synaptic interactions of bipolar, horizontal and amacrine cells produce center surround fields in ganglion cells Results from intracellular recordings

7 Vertebrate ganglion cells in general can be classified into two types
On-center/off-surround Off-center/on-surround Additionally, some are sensitive to movement in their field

8 The retina is a matrix of overlapping center/surround fields of ganglion cells

9 The search for the cell/s that recognize prey features
Neurophysiological method: Animal placed on stage Electrodes placed in specific neuropil Stimulated visually while recording from cells Results 1: Retinal ganglion cells can be typed based on response type based on size of receptive field: R2 4 degrees R3 8 degrees R4 16 degrees -no ganglion cell matched behavior

10 Visual pathway in the toad
Optic nerve crosses at the optic chiasm and projects contralaterally to: Optic tectum Pre-tectum of the thalamus Retinotopic organization is maintained in both these regions

11 Example of Retinotopy from the Macaque visual system
A flickering stimulus Retinotopic representation in layer 4C of V1 Tootell et al (1988a).

12 Retinotopic organization is maintained in both these regions
Cross sectional reference Thalamus

13 The search for the cell that recognizes prey
Results 2: Thalamic pretectal TH3 cell responses to test stimuli Small receptive fields Responsive to moving stimuli Collectively (as a population) map visual field Do not correlate to behavior- are not prey detectors

14 The search for the cell that recognizes prey
The T5 cell integration of worm features: Size Shape Movement 2 types defined by different response profiles T5(2) cells in particular produced invariant responses across changes in a number of parameters: Contrast Velocity Distance So long as the worm-like stimulus moved along its long-axis

15 The T5(2) response: Putting it all together

16 Antatomical and physiological organization of TH3, T5(1) and T5(2) cells
+ - Output Output options: T5(1) HIGH/ TH3 LOW = T5 (2) HIGH T5(1) HIGH/TH3 HIGH = T5(2) CANCELED T5(1) LOW/TH3 LOW = T5(2) NO INPUT/CANCELED T5(1) LOW/TH3 HIGH = T5(2) INHIBITED

17 So what do you predict would happen behaviorally and in terms of T5(2) cells if you cut the output from TH3 to T5(2)? T5(1) TH3 T5(2) + - Output TH3 lesion Pre leison


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