This work was supported by the UK Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC, grant numbers BB/L002353/1; BB/L000814/1; BB/L00111X/1). AF was supported by a PhD studentship from Plymouth University.We present the study of a minimal microcircuit controlling locomotion in two-day-old Xenopus tadpoles. During swimming, neurons in the spinal central pattern generator (CPG) generate anti-phase oscillations between left and right half-centres. Experimental recordings show that the same CPG neurons can also generate transient bouts of long-lasting in-phase oscillations between left-right centres. These synchronous episodes are rarely recorded and have no identified behavioural purpose. However, metamorphosing tadpoles require bo...
Vertebrate locomotion is heavily dependent on descending control originating in the midbrain and sub...
Animal survival profoundly depends on the ability to detect stimuli in the environment, process them...
1. In Xenopus embryos, the frequency of natural and fictive swimming usually drops slowly as swimmin...
Many neural circuits are capable of generating multiple stereotyped outputs after different sensory ...
Effective movement is central to survival and it is essential for all animals to react in response ...
Many neural circuits are capable of generating multiple stereotyped outputs after different sensory ...
We present a detailed computational model of interacting neuronal populations that mimic the hatchli...
Vertebrate central pattern generators (CPGs) controlling locomotion contain neurons which provide th...
We describe a novel preparation of the isolated brainstem and spinal cord from pro-metamorphic tadpo...
Authors thank Royal Society, Wellcome Trust and BBSRC (BB/L00111X) for their support in the past.Ver...
Electrical coupling is important in rhythm generating systems. We examine its role in circuits contr...
In this thesis we used mathematical and computational models to study neuronal net- works that cont...
The impact of activity in Xenopus embryonic and larval development was studied with regards to the l...
Motor networks typically generate several related output patterns or gaits where individual neurons ...
Vertebrate locomotion is heavily dependent on descending control originating in the midbrain and sub...
Vertebrate locomotion is heavily dependent on descending control originating in the midbrain and sub...
Animal survival profoundly depends on the ability to detect stimuli in the environment, process them...
1. In Xenopus embryos, the frequency of natural and fictive swimming usually drops slowly as swimmin...
Many neural circuits are capable of generating multiple stereotyped outputs after different sensory ...
Effective movement is central to survival and it is essential for all animals to react in response ...
Many neural circuits are capable of generating multiple stereotyped outputs after different sensory ...
We present a detailed computational model of interacting neuronal populations that mimic the hatchli...
Vertebrate central pattern generators (CPGs) controlling locomotion contain neurons which provide th...
We describe a novel preparation of the isolated brainstem and spinal cord from pro-metamorphic tadpo...
Authors thank Royal Society, Wellcome Trust and BBSRC (BB/L00111X) for their support in the past.Ver...
Electrical coupling is important in rhythm generating systems. We examine its role in circuits contr...
In this thesis we used mathematical and computational models to study neuronal net- works that cont...
The impact of activity in Xenopus embryonic and larval development was studied with regards to the l...
Motor networks typically generate several related output patterns or gaits where individual neurons ...
Vertebrate locomotion is heavily dependent on descending control originating in the midbrain and sub...
Vertebrate locomotion is heavily dependent on descending control originating in the midbrain and sub...
Animal survival profoundly depends on the ability to detect stimuli in the environment, process them...
1. In Xenopus embryos, the frequency of natural and fictive swimming usually drops slowly as swimmin...