2024
DOI: 10.1101/2024.04.15.589655
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Inhibitory control of locomotor statistics in walkingDrosophila

Hannah Gattuso,
Kavin Nuñez,
Beatriz de la Rea
et al.

Abstract: In order to forage for food, many animals regulate not only specific limb movements but the statistics of locomotor behavior over time, for example switching between long-range dispersal behaviors and more localized search depending on the availability of resources. How pre-motor circuits regulate such locomotor statistics is not clear. Here we took advantage of the robust changes in locomotor statistics evoked by attractive odors in walking Drosophila to investigate their neural control. We began by analyzing… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…This, in conjunction with our previously published result of a decrease in speed after plume encounters [20] suggests that the decrease in the head-pitch motion might be a strategy to localize the odor source. Interestingly, this reduction in ground speed right upon attractive odor presentation has also been recently shown in walking flies [37], and in freely flying flies upon optogenetic activation of the olfactory receptors [38].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 60%
“…This, in conjunction with our previously published result of a decrease in speed after plume encounters [20] suggests that the decrease in the head-pitch motion might be a strategy to localize the odor source. Interestingly, this reduction in ground speed right upon attractive odor presentation has also been recently shown in walking flies [37], and in freely flying flies upon optogenetic activation of the olfactory receptors [38].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 60%