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Showing 1–11 of 11 results
Advanced filters: Author: Gwyneth M. Card Clear advanced filters
  • Analysis of behaviour, physiology, anatomy and connectomics in Drosophila shows how direction-specific visual information is transformed onto downstream premotor networks and converted into appropriate motor responses.

    • Mark Dombrovski
    • Martin Y. Peek
    • Gwyneth M. Card
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 613, P: 534-542
  • The discovery of a visual-looming-sensitive neuron, LPLC2, that provides input to the Drosophila escape pathway, and uses dendrites patterned to integrate directionally selective inputs to selectively encode outward motion.

    • Nathan C. Klapoetke
    • Aljoscha Nern
    • Gwyneth M. Card
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 551, P: 237-241
  • A detailed whole-body model of the fruit fly, developed using a physics-based simulation and deep reinforcement learning, accurately replicates real fly behaviour.

    • Roman Vaxenburg
    • Igor Siwanowicz
    • Srinivas C. Turaga
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 643, P: 1312-1320
  • Three electron microscopy datasets are combined to provide a complete connectomic description of the neural circuitry that makes up the neck connective in Drosophila, including the descending neurons, ascending neurons and sensory ascending neurons.

    • Tomke Stürner
    • Paul Brooks
    • Katharina Eichler
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 643, P: 158-172
  • In Drosophila melanogaster, descending interneurons known as giant fibers (GFs) are associated with escape behavior. The authors demonstrate that a synthetic looming predator stimulus can trigger GF-mediated short escape and parallel circuit–mediated long escape modes, and the relative spike timing between these circuits determines which escape mode is elicited.

    • Catherine R von Reyn
    • Patrick Breads
    • Gwyneth M Card
    Research
    Nature Neuroscience
    Volume: 17, P: 962-970
  • Looming discs are perceived as an innate threat by flies and elicit a survival response. Here, the authors report that flies exhibit either an escape or freezing response depending on their walking speed and identify the involvement of a pair of neurons in mediating the behavior.

    • Ricardo Zacarias
    • Shigehiro Namiki
    • Marta A. Moita
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 9, P: 1-11
  • Systematic culture and genome sequencing of thoracic airway commensal bacteria finds many potential influences on lung health and disease. Polyomics of differentiated airway epithelium also suggest pathways that may sustain host-microbial interactions.

    • Leah Cuthbertson
    • Ulrike Löber
    • William. O. C. Cookson
    ResearchOpen Access
    Communications Biology
    Volume: 7, P: 1-14