When Thursday, January 15, 2009
Time
4:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Where Tech M345
map it
Audience
- Faculty/Staff - Student - Public
Contact Virginia Lorenzo
847-491-5635
Group McCormick - Biomedical Engineering Department
More Info http://www.mech.northwestern.edu/hartmann/
Light refreshments will be served in ME Conference room
Immediately following the seminar
Professor Mitra J. Hartman
Departments of Biomedical Engineering and Mechanical Engineering
McCormick School of Engineering
Northwestern University
Abstract: Rats are nocturnal, burrowing animals that use their vibrissae (whiskers) to tactually explore the environment. Using only its whiskers, a rat can determine object size, shape, orientation, and texture. This makes the rat vibrissal system an excellent model to explore the structure of movements that subserve sensing. I will describe recent experiments in our laboratory that have aimed to understand neural encoding and processing in the vibrissal system using both a "bottom-up" and a "top-down" approach. In the bottom-up approach, a basic analysis of whisker mechanics has provided insight into the physical variables (forces and moments) encoded by primary sensory neurons in the trigeminal ganglion. This analysis has suggested some mechanisms by which the animal might determine the radial distance to an object. In the top-down approach, behavioral studies have helped to constrain the types of neural processing that may enable object localization in the horizontal plane. Our laboratory now aims to merge the two approaches using a new laser-light sheet technology developed to visualize whisker-object contact patterns. I will describe some preliminary results from this system and suggest some ways that the nervous system may interpret the spatiotemporal "flow" of sensory information across the whisker array during natural exploratory behaviors.