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Stimulus predictability mediates a switch in locomotor smooth pursuit performance for Eigenmannia virescens.

Authors :
Roth, Eatai
Zhuang, Katie
Stamper, Sarah A.
Fortune, Eric S.
Cowan, Noah J.
Source :
Journal of Experimental Biology; Apr2011, Vol. 214 Issue 7, p1170-1180, 11p
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

The weakly electric glass knifefish, Elgenmannia virescens, will swim forward and backward, using propulsion from an anal ribbon fin, in response to motion of a computer-controlled moving refuge. Fish were recorded performing a refuge-tracking behavior for sinusoidal (predictable) and sum-of-sines (pseudo-random) refuge trajectories. For all trials, we observed high coherence between refuge and fish trajectories, suggesting linearity of the tracking dynamics. But superposition failed: we observed categorical differences in tracking between the predictable single-sine stimuli and the unpredictable sum-of-sines stimuli. This nonlinearity suggests a stimulus-mediated adaptation. At all frequencies tested, fish demonstrated reduced tracking error when tracking single-sine trajectories and this was typically accompanied by a reduction in overall movement. Most notably, fish demonstrated reduced phase lag when tracking single-sine trajectories. These data support the hypothesis that fish generate an internal dynamical model of the stimulus motion, hence improving tracking of predictable trajectories (relative to unpredictable ones) despite similar or reduced motor cost. Similar predictive mechanisms based on the dynamics of stimulus movement have been proposed recently, but almost exclusively for nonlocomotor tasks by humans, such as oculomotor target tracking and posture control. These data suggest that such mechanisms might be common across taxa and behaviors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00220949
Volume :
214
Issue :
7
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Experimental Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
60577257
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.048124