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1 ir dendrites in a defined dorsal part of the lobula.
2 s to palisades of small-field neurons in the lobula.
3 e medulla with both the lobula plate and the lobula.
4 arated from color-processing pathways to the lobula.
5 from columnar neurons of the medulla and the lobula.
6 multiple sources, including the optic lobe's lobula.
7 at their terminals in the third neuropil, or lobula.
9 05 morphologically identified neurons in the lobula, a major visual processing structure of bumblebee
11 tation-selective neurons at the level of the lobula and lateral protocerebrum and with respect to the
16 1 dendrites innervate multiple layers of the lobula, and each dendrite spans enough columns to sample
18 c fields in the optic lobes, the medulla and lobula, and the organization of their terminals in the c
19 tions received from the medulla and from the lobula, and the presence of large tangential neurons exi
20 ransmedullary neurons at T5 dendrites in the lobula, and the presence there of local GABA-immunoreact
21 ndritic processes of the LGMD1 and -2 in the lobula are localised to discrete regions, allowing the d
23 ypothesize that the anatomical layers of the lobula are the structural basis for the segregation of v
24 ewly identified recurrent neuron linking the lobula back to the inner medulla demonstrate that the lo
26 ell having a clearly defined terminal in the lobula, but having dendrite-like processes in the medull
29 gated 19 types of putative feature selective lobula columnar (LC) neurons in the optic lobe of the fr
30 Y (TmY), Y, lobula-complex intrinsic (Lccn), lobula columnar (Lcn), lobula plate intrinsic (Lpi), and
31 population of visual projection neurons-the lobula columnar 16 (LC16) cells-that respond to looming
34 e attributed velocity encoding to input from lobula columnar type 4 (LC4) visual projection neurons,
36 ctive looming detecting neuron, lobula plate/lobula columnar, type II (LPLC2) in Drosophila, and show
45 d tangential neuron that is intrinsic to the lobula complex, and representatives of the Tm- and Y-cel
46 processes from the protocerebrum supply the lobula complex, and two large 5-HTi processes from the p
47 retinotopic map in both the medulla and the lobula complex, generating four overlapping topographic
53 nsmedullary (Tm), transmedullary Y (TmY), Y, lobula-complex intrinsic (Lccn), lobula columnar (Lcn),
55 e from the medulla in a special layer of the lobula containing the dendrites of directionally selecti
60 ck to the inner medulla demonstrate that the lobula discriminates nondirectional edge motion from fli
62 highlights how spatiotemporal coding in the lobula efficiently compresses visual features, offering
63 ng revealed that neuropil regions within the lobula exhibited strong responses to objects, such as a
64 we identify substantial projections into the lobula, extending the known motion pathways and suggesti
74 We investigated an identified neuron (the lobula giant movement detector, LGMD, of locusts) whose
75 project to the midbrain, the monostratified lobula giants type 1 (MLG1), form a system of 16 retinot
76 ual projection neurons LT11 and LC14 and the lobula intrinsic neurons Li3 and Li4 as synaptic targets
78 room body also receives projections from the lobula, it is entirely distinct from the reniform body,
80 ptic lobe neuropils-the lamina, medulla, and lobula-linked by chiasmata has been used to support argu
81 of retinotopic lobula plate-lobula (LPL) and lobula-lobula plate (LLP) cells, each of which has dendr
82 roup is composed of retinotopic lobula plate-lobula (LPL) and lobula-lobula plate (LLP) cells, each o
86 c Tm neurons and 28 known and novel types of lobula neurons, we identify anatomically the visual proj
90 the fine dendrites of the LGMD in the distal lobula, often in large numbers and completely covering t
91 s, we hypothesized that the circuitry of the lobula--one of the four, primary neuropiles of the fly o
92 primitives are unreliably encoded by single lobula output neurons because of high synaptic noise, th
96 reflect the general structure of the insect lobula plate and, hence, provide support to the notion o
97 y paired odor, and presynaptic inputs to the lobula plate are required for behavioral odor tracking b
98 achromatic, motion-sensitive pathways to the lobula plate are separated from color-processing pathway
99 e to the brain, many output neurons from the lobula plate are separated physically from their counter
100 aphan flies, giant tangential neurons in the lobula plate are supplied by isomorphic arrays of evolut
102 divisions of the retinotopic pathways to the lobula plate have been suggested from anatomical observa
103 ions and the retinotopic organization of the lobula plate in a crustacean, the crab Neohelice granula
106 lex intrinsic (Lccn), lobula columnar (Lcn), lobula plate intrinsic (Lpi), and lobula tangential (Lt)
111 rustacean raises the question of whether the lobula plate of insects and isopods evolved convergently
112 n, three of the Odd neurons project into the lobula plate of the optic lobe, and two of these cells e
115 variety of direction-selective cells in the lobula plate shows no evidence of dynamics that match th
116 e that is also present in calcium signals of lobula plate tangential cell dendrites but not predicted
117 late to the medulla; and a new heterolateral lobula plate tangential cell that collates directional,
118 bio-plausible STMDs and optic flow-sensitive Lobula Plate Tangential Cells (LPTCs) in different ways
119 lls do not resemble any previously described lobula plate tangential cells (LPTCs) in Drosophila.
120 ellular calcium activity in motion-sensitive lobula plate tangential cells (LPTCs) in head-fixed Dros
122 on-processing pathway, the horizontal-system lobula plate tangential cells (LPTCs) in the fly optic l
126 the dendrites of wide-field motion-sensitive lobula plate tangential cells by antagonistic transmitte
127 irst demonstrate electrophysiologically that lobula plate tangential cells can be activated and deact
129 we describe a novel neuron class in the fly lobula plate that clearly does not derive its input from
130 de-field motion-selective interneuron of the lobula plate that shares anatomical and physiological si
131 ion-vision-sensitive neurons in the hoverfly lobula plate to quantify responses to stimuli containing
132 d, directionally selective feedback from the lobula plate to the medulla; and a new heterolateral lob
135 the fly's visual course control center, the lobula plate, 10 so-called vertical system (VS) cells ar
138 panied by a tectum-like fourth neuropil, the lobula plate, characterized by wide-field tangential neu
139 processes in the medulla and, possibly, the lobula plate, discriminates the direction of motion and
140 identified T4/T5's synaptic partners in the lobula plate, revealing a diverse set of new cell types
142 in one of the four retinotopic layers in the lobula plate, where each layer encodes one of the four d
143 s called T4 and T5 form a spatial map in the lobula plate, where they each terminate in one of four r
144 provide inputs to large-field neurons in the lobula plate, which control optomotor gaze stabilization
163 an ultra-selective looming detecting neuron, lobula plate/lobula columnar, type II (LPLC2) in Drosoph
165 e results demonstrate unambiguously that the lobula receives information about motion and that the ch
168 ss of motion-sensitive neurons of the crab's lobula that project to the midbrain, the monostratified
169 e onto assemblies of columnar neurons in the lobula, the axons of which segregate to project to discr
170 ed physically from their counterparts in the lobula, there is an additional class of lobula complex o
171 rmation encoded in cells projecting from the lobula to discrete optic glomeruli in the central brain
173 roject axons to a deeper optic neuropil, the lobula, which in insects has been implicated in processi