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Electrosensory data acquisition and signal processing strategies in electric fish Mark E. Nelson Beckman Institute Univ. of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
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How Electric Fish Work
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Distribution of Electric Fish Fish tank upstairs black ghost knifefish elephant- nose fish
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Electric Organ Discharge (EOD) - Spatial
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EOD - Temporal
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Electric Organ Discharge (EOD)
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Principle of active electrolocation
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mechano MacIver, from Carr et al., 1982 Electroreceptors ~15,000 tuberous electroreceptor organs 1 nerve fiber per electroreceptor organ up to 1000 spikes/s per nerve fiber
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Individual Sensors (Electroreceptors) V IN nerve spikes OUT
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Neural coding in electrosensory afferent fibers
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Probability coding (P-type) afferent spike trains 00010101100101010011001010000101001010 P head = 0.333 P head = 0.337 P head = 0.333
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Principle of active electrolocation
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Electrosensory Image Formation
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Prey-capture video analysis
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Prey capture behavior
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Fish Body Model
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Motion capture software
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MOVIE: prey capture behavior
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Electrosensory Image Reconstruction
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Voltage perturbation at skin : Estimating Daphnia signal strength electrical contrast prey volume fish E-field at prey distance from prey to receptor THIS FORMULA CAN BE USED TO COMPUTE THE SIGNAL AT EVERY POINT ON THE BODY SURFACE
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MOVIE: Electrosensory Images
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System Capabilities Electric fish can analyze electrosensory images to extract information on target direction (bearing) distance size shape composition (impedance)
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Distance Discrimination
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Shape Discrimination
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Shape Generalization
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Shape “completion”
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Impedance Discrimination
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How Do They Do It? Electric fish analyze dynamic 2D electrosensory images on the body surface to determine target direction, distance, size, shape and composition (impedance) Fish might perform an inverse mapping from 2D sensor data to obtain a dense 3D neural representation of world conductivity sensor data 3D conductivity action Alternatively, fish might use sensor data to directly estimate target parameters sensor data target parameters action
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Parameter estimation (bearing)
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Parameter Estimation (cont.)
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Dynamic Movement Strategies Fish are constantly in motion not a single, static ‘snapshot’ dynamic, spatiotemporal data stream With respect to target objects in the environment, fish body movements simultaneously influence the relative positioning of the sensor array the electric organ effector organs (e.g. mouth)
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MOVIE: Electrosensory Images
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Active motor strategies: Dorsal roll toward prey
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Probing Motor Acts chin probing back-and-forth (va et vient ) lateral probing tangential probing stationary probing
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Fish exploring a 4 cm cube
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CNS Signal Processing Strategies Multi-scale filtering spatial and temporal Adaptive background subtraction tail-bend suppression Attentional ‘spotlight’ mechanisms local gain control
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Multiple Maps
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Multi-scale Filtering INPUT (from skin receptors) Centromedial map High spatial acuity Low temporal acuity Centrolateral map Inter spatial acuity Inter temporal acuity Lateral map Low spatial acuity High temporal acuity temporal integration both spatial integration HINDBRAIN PROCESSING PERIPHERAL SENSORS
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Adaptive Background Subtraction
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Attentional ‘spotlight’ mechanism
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Summary Fish can evaluate direction, distance, size, shape and composition of target objects How? model-based parameter estimation based on 2D image analysis, not full 3D reconstruction presumably some sort of (adaptive) (extended) (unscented) Kalman-like algorithm extensive pre-filtering (virtual sensors?) self-calibrating, adaptive noise suppression, multi- scale spatial and temporal signal averaging dynamic control of source and array position
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Acknowledgements Colleagues Curtis Bell (OHSU) Len Maler (Univ. Ottawa) Gerhard von der Emde (Univ. Bonn) Nelson Lab Members Ling Chen, Rüdiger Krahe, Malcolm MacIver Funding Agencies NIMH, NSF
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