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Published June 2006 | public
Journal Article

Behavioral guides for sensory neurophysiology

Konishi, M.

Abstract

The study of natural behavior is important for understanding the coding schemes of sensory systems. The jamming avoidance response of the weakly electric fish Eigenmannia is an excellent example of a bottom–up approach, in which behavioral analyses guided neurophysiological studies. These studies started from the electroreceptive sense organs to the motor output consisting of pacemaker neurons. Going in the opposite direction, from the central nervous system to lower centers, is the characteristic of the top–down approach. Although this approach is perhaps more difficult than the bottom–up approach, it was successfully employed in the neuroethological analysis of sound localization in the barn owl. In the latter studies, high-order neurons selective for complex natural stimuli led to the discovery of neural pathways and networks responsible for the genesis of the stimulus selectivity. Comparison of Eigenmannia and barn owls, and their neural systems, has revealed similarities in network designs, such as parallel pathways and their convergence to produce stimulus selectivity necessary for detection of natural stimuli.

Additional Information

© 2006 Springer-Verlag. Received: 7 September 2004. Revised: 14 September 2005. Accepted: 26 December 2005. Published online: 24 January 2006. I thank Ted Bullock, Masashi Kawasaki, and Jose Luis Peña for their comments on the manuscript.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 25, 2023