The Relationship Between Visual Acuity and Illumination in the Fly, Lucilia Sericata

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Abstract

The variation in visual acuity with illumination has been studied by monitoring the extracellular response of direction sensitive motion detecting neurons to a drifting sine wave grating displayed upon an oscilloscope spreen. Acuity reaches a maximum value of 0.46 cycles/degree at luminances above 1.0 cd/m2 and decreases gradually over a 3.8 log unit attenuation in intensity to a minimum value of 0.05 cycles/degree. The results have been compared with theoretical acuity curves for the coupound eye with various dark adaptation mechanisms. The analysis indicates that a major strategy of dark adaptation in the fly is a process involving intensity-dependent neural summation of signals from photoreceptors having different visual axes. © 1978, Walter de Gruyter. All rights reserved.

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Dvorak, D., & Snyder, A. (1978). The Relationship Between Visual Acuity and Illumination in the Fly, Lucilia Sericata. Zeitschrift Fur Naturforschung - Section C Journal of Biosciences, 33(1–2), 139–143. https://doi.org/10.1515/znc-1978-1-225

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