4.4 Article

Response properties of optic flow neurons in the accessory optic system of hummingbirds versus zebra finches and pigeons

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 127, Issue 1, Pages 130-144

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00437.2021

Keywords

accessory optic system; basal optic root; optic flow; optokinetic; visual motion

Funding

  1. Canadian Institute for Health Research (CIHR)
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)

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By studying the visual response properties of hummingbirds, this study found that hummingbird nBOR neurons are more sensitive to stimulus velocity and more precise in the spatiotemporal domain. These results, in combination with specialization in LM, support the hypothesis that hummingbirds have evolved to be optic flow specialists to cope with the optomotor demands of sustained hovering flight.
Optokinetic responses function to maintain retinal image stabilization by minimizing optic flow that occurs during self-motion. The hovering ability of hummingbirds is an extreme example of this behavior. Optokinetic responses are mediated by direction-selective neurons with large receptive fields in the accessory optic system (AOS) and pretectum. Recent studies in hummingbirds showed that, compared with other bird species, 1) the pretectal nucleus lentiformis mesencephali (LM) is hypertrophied, 2) LM has a unique distribution of direction preferences, and 3) LM neurons are more tightly tuned to stimulus velocity. In this study, we sought to determine if there are concomitant changes in the nucleus of the basal optic root (nBOR) of the AOS. We recorded the visual response properties of nBOR neurons to large-field-drifting random dot patterns and sine-wave gratings in Anna's hummingbirds and zebra finches and compared these with archival data from pigeons. We found no differences with respect to the distribution of direction preferences: Neurons responsive to upward, downward, and nasal-to-temporal motion were equally represented in all three species, and neurons responsive to temporal-to-nasal motion were rare or absent (<5%). Compared with zebra finches and pigeons, however, hummingbird nBOR neurons were more tightly tuned to stimulus velocity of random dot stimuli. Moreover, in response to drifting gratings, hummingbird nBOR neurons are more tightly tuned in the spatiotemporal domain. These results, in combination with specialization in LM, support a hypothesis that hummingbirds have evolved to be optic flow specialists to cope with the optomotor demands of sustained hovering flight. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Hummingbirds have specialized response properties to optic flow in the pretectal nucleus lentiformis mesencephali (LM). The LM works with the nucleus of the basal optic root (nBOR) of the accessory optic system (AOS) to process global visual motion, but whether the neural response specializations observed in the LM extend to the nBOR is unknown. Hummingbird nBOR neurons are more tightly tuned to visual stimulus velocity, and in the spatiotemporal domain, compared with two nonhovering species.

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