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The Big Picture
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Animals are intrinsically computational.
We acquire sensory information about our environments, transform this information
into neural representations and memories, and calculate and execute decisions
based on recent and past experiences. Our own brains are staggeringly
complex, with billions of neurons networked by trillions of synapses. But the
basic "stuff" of our brains -- molecular and cellular structures
and interactions -- is shared with our simplest animal relatives. Thus simple
and well-chosen model organisms can be accessible vantage points with
perspective over general biological principles. We study brain and behavior
in the roundworm C. elegans. The worm only has 302 neurons, but is capable of
a variety of behaviors that display a range of computational powers. We focus
specifically on navigational behaviors responding to physical sensory inputs.
These inputs (e.g., temperature, pressure, electric fields) can be delivered
to the behaving worm both reliably and quantifiably. Navigation itself can be
reduced to a quantified pattern as an alternating sequence of forward
movements, turns, and reversals. From the systematic analysis of outward
motile behavior we can infer the inner workings of neural algorithms.
Applying recent advances in microscopy and optics, we are also able to
manipulate and monitor the workings of these neural circuits in the intact
animal. In this way, we strive to link brain and behavior in the simple but
fascinating creature. |
Last updated: June 23,
2005.