Caltech
Center for Neuromorphic Systems Engineering

Home
Research
News
People

[back]

Modular Electronics for Rapid Development of Behavioral Stimuli
Michael Reiser, Michael Dickinson

Whereas flies use many sensory modalities, most of the behaviors we casually observe are dominated by visual control. For this reason, presenting controlled visual environment to tethered flies continues to be a powerful experimental paradigm. Most experiments have been done in simple arenas, either patterns attached to a rotating drum, or in recent years, using cylinders covered with LEDs. Conventional display technologies (LCDs, CRTs, etc.) can not be used as stimuli for insect experiments, because their refresh rates are typically several times slower than the flicker fusion rate of insect visual systems. LEDs are used because they can be rapidly refreshed, which is necessary to maintain the illusion of motion. We have designed modular panels of 64 LEDs each, which can be snapped together to ‘tile’ an experimental environment with controllable displays. The panels are individually addressed and communicated with via a rapid serial interface. The panels have been designed to be extremely bright (with the added flexibility of individual pixel programmable brightness control), allowing experimentation over a broad range of behaviorally relevant stimuli conditions. The panels are controlled via a microprocessor controller which, for most experiments, will not require a computer in the loop, significantly reducing the infrastructure necessary for experiments. This technology allows an experimenter to build a visual arena with a customized geometry in a matter of hours.

Figure 3. A group of LED panels displaying a pattern (the number 5). These panels will be used to tile an arena for use in fly behavioral assays.


Figure 4. The electronics and connections for each LED panel. Each panel has an on-board microprocessor for maintaining high refresh rates and brightness control.


top