The purpose of the present study was to find out
what particular stimulus features, in addition to the direction
and velocity of motion, specifically activate neurons in
the nucleus lentiformis mesencephali (nLM) in pigeons.
Visual responses of 60 nLM cells to a variety of computer-generated
stimuli were extracellularly recorded and quantitatively
analyzed. Ten recording sites were histologically verified
to be localized within nLM with cobalt sulfide markings.
It was shown that the pigeon nLM cells were specifically
sensitive to the leading edge moving at the optimal velocity
in the preferred direction through their excitatory receptive
fields (ERFs). Generally speaking, nLM cells preferred
black edges to white ones. However, this preference cannot
be explained by OFF-responses to a light spot. The edge
sharpness was also an essential factor influencing the
responsive strength, with blurred edges producing little
or no visual responses at all. These neurons vigorously
responded to black edge orientated perpendicular to, and
moved in, the preferred direction; the magnitude of visual
responses was reduced with changing orientation. The spatial
summation occurred in all neurons tested, characterized
by the finding that neuronal firings increased as the leading
edge was lengthened until saturation was reached. On the
other hand, it appeared that nLM neurons could not detect
any differences in the shape and area of stimuli with an
identical edge. These data suggested that feature extraction
characteristics of nLM neurons may be specialized for detecting
optokinetic stimuli, but not for realizing pattern recognition.
This seems to be at least one of the reasons why large-field
gratings or random-dot patterns have been used to study
visual responses of accessory optic neurons and optokinetic
nystagmus, because many high-contrast edges in these stimuli
can activate a neuron to periodically discharge, or groups
of neurons to simultaneously fire to elicit optokinetic
reflex.