2021
DOI: 10.3389/fncir.2021.684872
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Modeling Nonlinear Dendritic Processing of Facilitation in a Dragonfly Target-Tracking Neuron

Abstract: Dragonflies are highly skilled and successful aerial predators that are even capable of selectively attending to one target within a swarm. Detection and tracking of prey is likely to be driven by small target motion detector (STMD) neurons identified from several insect groups. Prior work has shown that dragonfly STMD responses are facilitated by targets moving on a continuous path, enhancing the response gain at the present and predicted future location of targets. In this study, we combined detailed morphol… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Despite their low-resolution eyes and tiny brains, insects provide an elegant solution to discern small moving targets against complex dynamic environment robustly with limited computational resources [7]. For example, dragonflies are quite apt at chasing small mates or prey while performing sophisticated fast aerial maneuvers, evidenced by extremely high successful capture rate over 95% [8]. A group of neuron subtypes in insects' visual systems, called small target motion detectors (STMDs), are believed to underlie such excellent sensitivity [9]- [11].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite their low-resolution eyes and tiny brains, insects provide an elegant solution to discern small moving targets against complex dynamic environment robustly with limited computational resources [7]. For example, dragonflies are quite apt at chasing small mates or prey while performing sophisticated fast aerial maneuvers, evidenced by extremely high successful capture rate over 95% [8]. A group of neuron subtypes in insects' visual systems, called small target motion detectors (STMDs), are believed to underlie such excellent sensitivity [9]- [11].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%