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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Real-time processing of physiological signals for feedback control

Butala, Jaydrath 26 June 2009
Extensive studies about neural mechanisms involved in insect flight control have been carried out. Adaptive control of locomotion requires integration of salient sensory cues with ongoing motor activity. During flight, inputs received by an organism through sensory organs are processed by the central nervous system (CNS) and the integrated output thus obtained plays a significant role in controlling the wing phase shifts and flight muscle depressor asymmetries associated with adaptive flight maneuvers. The resulting maneuvers, in turn, bring a change in the insects sensory environment, thereby closing the feedback loop. Research on insect flight has been carried out using immobile preparations (tethered) and mobile preparations (free flight untethered). There are pros and cons associated with the tethered and the untethered approach. The tethered approach, however, provides an easier way to study the CNS and its role in motor control of flight. Insects such as locusts and moths exhibit pertinent wing phase shifts and asymmetries in depressor muscles. For locusts constant wing phase shifts and m97 (forewing first basalar depressor muscle) depressor asymmetries have been observed during adaptive flight maneuvers making this a useful system for creation of behaviorally appropriate visual feedback. A method that utilizes asymmetrical timing of bilateral depressor muscles, the forewing first basalars (m97), of the locust to close a visual feedback loop in a computer-generated flight simulator is presented here. The method converts the time difference between left and right m97s to analog voltage values. Analog voltage values can be acquired using an open-loop experimental protocol (visual motion controlled by the experimenter), or can be used to control closed-loop experiments (muscle activity controls the visual stimuli) experiments. We recorded electromyographic (EMG) activity from right and left m97 muscles. On testing this circuit with real animals, we were able to detect the spike time difference and convert it to voltage values. These voltage values were utilized to control the presentation of a stimulus in a closed-loop environment. The feedback circuit presented here may be used in conjunction with the flight simulator(s) to understand the neural mechanisms involved in control of insect flight and provide further understanding of general mechanisms of neural control of behaviour.
2

Real-time processing of physiological signals for feedback control

Butala, Jaydrath 26 June 2009 (has links)
Extensive studies about neural mechanisms involved in insect flight control have been carried out. Adaptive control of locomotion requires integration of salient sensory cues with ongoing motor activity. During flight, inputs received by an organism through sensory organs are processed by the central nervous system (CNS) and the integrated output thus obtained plays a significant role in controlling the wing phase shifts and flight muscle depressor asymmetries associated with adaptive flight maneuvers. The resulting maneuvers, in turn, bring a change in the insects sensory environment, thereby closing the feedback loop. Research on insect flight has been carried out using immobile preparations (tethered) and mobile preparations (free flight untethered). There are pros and cons associated with the tethered and the untethered approach. The tethered approach, however, provides an easier way to study the CNS and its role in motor control of flight. Insects such as locusts and moths exhibit pertinent wing phase shifts and asymmetries in depressor muscles. For locusts constant wing phase shifts and m97 (forewing first basalar depressor muscle) depressor asymmetries have been observed during adaptive flight maneuvers making this a useful system for creation of behaviorally appropriate visual feedback. A method that utilizes asymmetrical timing of bilateral depressor muscles, the forewing first basalars (m97), of the locust to close a visual feedback loop in a computer-generated flight simulator is presented here. The method converts the time difference between left and right m97s to analog voltage values. Analog voltage values can be acquired using an open-loop experimental protocol (visual motion controlled by the experimenter), or can be used to control closed-loop experiments (muscle activity controls the visual stimuli) experiments. We recorded electromyographic (EMG) activity from right and left m97 muscles. On testing this circuit with real animals, we were able to detect the spike time difference and convert it to voltage values. These voltage values were utilized to control the presentation of a stimulus in a closed-loop environment. The feedback circuit presented here may be used in conjunction with the flight simulator(s) to understand the neural mechanisms involved in control of insect flight and provide further understanding of general mechanisms of neural control of behaviour.

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