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Published 1998 | Published
Book Section - Chapter Open

An Analog VLSI Model of the Fly Elementary Motion Detector

Abstract

Flies are capable of rapidly detecting and integrating visual motion information in behaviorly-relevant ways. The first stage of visual motion processing in flies is a retinotopic array of functional units known as elementary motion detectors (EMDs). Several decades ago, Reichardt and colleagues developed a correlation-based model of motion detection that described the behavior of these neural circuits. We have implemented a variant of this model in a 2.0µm analog CMOS VLSI process. The result is a low-power, continuous-time analog circuit with integrated photoreceptors that responds to motion in real time. The responses of the circuit to drifting sinusoidal gratings qualitatively resemble the temporal frequency response, spatial frequency response, and direction selectivity of motion-sensitive neurons observed in insects. In addition to its possible engineering applications, the circuit could potentially be used as a building block for constructing hardware models of higher-level insect motion integration.

Additional Information

© 1998 Massachusetts Institute of Technology. This work was supported by the Center for Neuromorphic Systems Engineering as a part of NSF's Engineering Research Center program, and by ONR. Reid Harrison is supported by an NDSEG fellowship from ONR. We thank Bradley Minch, Holger Krapp, and Rainer Deutschmann for invaluable discussions.

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September 15, 2023
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January 13, 2024