Abstract

Multisensory integration is a prerequisite for effective locomotor control in most animals. Especially, the impressive aerial performance of insects relies on rapid and precise integration of multiple sensory modalities that provide feedback on different time scales. In flies, continuous visual signalling from the compound eyes is fused with phasic proprioceptive feedback to ensure precise neural activation of wing steering muscles (WSM) within narrow temporal phase bands of the stroke cycle. This phase-locked activation relies on mechanoreceptors distributed over wings and gyroscopic halteres. Here we investigate visual steering performance of tethered flying fruit flies with reduced haltere and wing feedback signalling. Using a flight simulator, we evaluated visual object fixation behaviour, optomotor altitude control and saccadic escape reflexes. The behavioural assays show an antagonistic effect of wing and haltere signalling on visuomotor gain during flight. Compared with controls, suppression of haltere feedback attenuates while suppression of wing feedback enhances the animal’s wing steering range. Our results suggest that the generation of motor commands owing to visual perception is dynamically controlled by proprioception. We outline a potential physiological mechanism based on the biomechanical properties of WSM and sensory integration processes at the level of motoneurons. Collectively, the findings contribute to our general understanding how moving animals integrate sensory information with dynamically changing temporal structure.

Highlights

  • Rapid and precise integration of multiple sensory modalities is essential for efficient control of locomotion [1]

  • Our results show an antagonistic effect of haltere and wing mechanosensory feedback on wing kinematics, suggesting that visuomotor gain in flies is determined by proprioceptive feedback

  • Motor control systems in vertebrates and invertebrates share several common principles. Most animals use both continuous feedback provided by directional senses such as vision, olfaction and hearing, and phasic proprioceptive feedback from mechanoreceptors modulating motor activity on a cycle-by-cycle basis [1]

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Summary

Introduction

Rapid and precise integration of multiple sensory modalities is essential for efficient control of locomotion [1] This is especially apparent in flies performing escape manoeuvres, during which the animal generates fast, directed turns away from an approaching predator and actively re-stabilizes body posture within milliseconds [2,3,4]. This remarkable manoeuvre exemplifies the integration of feedback signals from two highly.

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