Events
Transatlantic Systems Neuro Seminar

Hello!

It's my pleasure to invite you to the next Transatlantic Systems Neuroscience Seminar. It will be held on  Wednesday, May 12th, 3:30 PM Polish time (9:30 AM EST).

Our guest will be Jenny Read  (Newcastle University), with a talk entitled Stereo vision in humans and insects. Please find the abstract below. 

The address is: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/194382755?pwd=NUlaQVo4b0xLVE0xNGJmSDhoenA3Zz09

The password is nol1917.

Best,
TSNS Team

Stereo vision in humans and insects

Stereopsis – deriving information about distance by comparing views from two eyes – is widespread in vertebrates but so far known in only class of invertebrates, the praying mantids. Understanding stereopsis which has evolved independently in such a different nervous system promises to shed light on the constraints governing any stereo system. Behavioral experiments indicate that insect stereopsis is functionally very different from that studied in vertebrates. Vertebrate stereopsis depends on matching up the pattern of contrast in the two eyes; it works in static scenes, and may have evolved in order to break camouflage rather than to detect distances. Insect stereopsis matches up regions of the image where the luminance is changing; it is insensitive to the detailed pattern of contrast and operates to detect the distance to a moving target. Work from my lab has revealed a network of neurons within the mantis brain which are tuned to binocular disparity, including some that project to early visual areas. This is in contrast to previous theories which postulated that disparity was computed only at a single, late stage, where visual information is passed down to motor neurons. Thus, despite their very different properties, the underlying neural mechanisms supporting vertebrate and insect stereopsis may be computationally more similar than has been assumed.

Date of publication
12 May 2021
Date of event
2021-05-12
Start
15:30
End
17:30
Place
On-line