Visual Attention in Flies-Dopamine in the Mushroom Bodies Mediates the After-Effect of Cueing.
Visual environments may simultaneously comprise stimuli of different significance. Often such stimuli require incompatible responses. Selective visual attention allows an animal to respond exclusively to the stimuli at a certain location in the visual field. In the process of establishing its focus...
Main Authors: | Sebastian Koenig, Reinhard Wolf, Martin Heisenberg |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
2016-01-01
|
Series: | PLoS ONE |
Online Access: | http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5003349?pdf=render |
Similar Items
-
Vision in Flies: Measuring the Attention Span.
by: Sebastian Koenig, et al.
Published: (2016-01-01) -
Inescapable Stress Changes Walking Behavior in Flies - Learned Helplessness Revisited.
by: Sophie Batsching, et al.
Published: (2016-01-01) -
Cueing Visual Attention to Spatial Locations With Auditory Cues
by: Matthew Kean, et al.
Published: (2008-12-01) -
Multi-stability with ambiguous visual stimuli in Drosophila orientation behavior.
by: Franziska Toepfer, et al.
Published: (2018-02-01) -
Dopamine signalling in mushroom bodies regulates temperature-preference behaviour in Drosophila.
by: Sunhoe Bang, et al.
Published: (2011-03-01)