Distinct memory traces for two visual features in the Drosophila brain
0301 basic medicine
Brain
03 medical and health sciences
Memory, Short-Term
Pattern Recognition, Visual
Torque
Memory
Mutation
Animals
Drosophila Proteins
Drosophila
Cues
Photic Stimulation
Adenylyl Cyclases
DOI:
10.1038/nature04381
Publication Date:
2006-02-03T17:02:33Z
AUTHORS (8)
ABSTRACT
The fly Drosophila melanogaster can discriminate and remember visual landmarks. It analyses selected parts of its visual environment according to a small number of pattern parameters such as size, colour or contour orientation, and stores particular parameter values. Like humans, flies recognize patterns independently of the retinal position during acquisition of the pattern (translation invariance). Here we show that the central-most part of the fly brain, the fan-shaped body, contains parts of a network mediating visual pattern recognition. We have identified short-term memory traces of two pattern parameters--elevation in the panorama and contour orientation. These can be localized to two groups of neurons extending branches as parallel, horizontal strata in the fan-shaped body. The central location of this memory store is well suited to mediate translational invariance.
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