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The relative importance of ultraviolet and longer wavelengths in the response properties of fly visual systems

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Abstract

A generalized analysis of the generator potential responses of R1-6 cells of Calliphora provides remarkable information on the visual properties for the Diptera. This shows that, although these cells have two peak response sensivities for monochromatic stimuli at 350 and 480 nm under single color stimulus conditions, and when the background illumination is either zero or in the region of 450–560 nm, the sensitivity to ultraviolet light is practically eliminated for background illumination in either the ultraviolet or the region around 600 nm or when any simultaneous dynamic stimulus in the region of 480–550 nm is also applied. These results seem somewhat perplexing to an understanding of the behavioral vision properties. It also is not consistant with the concept that the ultraviolet response is initiated by a sensitizing pigment within these cells that transfers energy to the rhodopsin-metarhodopsin process. However, it strengthens other evidence that the limited condition of ultraviolet responses comes from interaction from R7,8 cells but does not play an important behavioral role in the visual system fed from cells R1-6. As discussed in this paper, any high level pattern recognition controlling behavioral response to ultraviolet stimuli comes from the R7,8 cell system.

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Fargason, R.D., McCann, G.D. The relative importance of ultraviolet and longer wavelengths in the response properties of fly visual systems. Biol. Cybernetics 34, 151–157 (1979). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00336966

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