Many motor responses to sensory input, like locomotion or eye movements, are much slower than reflexes. Can simpler animals provide fundamental answers about the cellular mechanisms for motor decisions? Can we observe the ‘accumulation’ of excitation to threshold proposed to underlie decision making elsewhere? We explore how somatosensory touch stimulation leads to the decision to swim in hatchling Xenopus tadpoles. Delays measured to swimming in behaving and immobilized tadpoles are long and variable. Activity in their extensively studied sensory and sensory pathway neurons is too short-lived to explain these response delays. Instead, whole-cell recordings from the hindbrain reticulospinal neurons that drive swimming show these receive pr...
During active movements, neural replicas of the underlying motor commands may assist in adapting mot...
Vertebrate central pattern generators (CPGs) controlling locomotion contain neurons which provide th...
This research has been supported by the Royal Society, Wellcome Trust (089319), and the Biotechnolog...
Funding: The Biotechnology and the Biological Sciences Research Council grants: BB/L002353/1, BB/L00...
All animals use sensory systems to monitor external events and have to decide whether to move. Respo...
All animals use sensory systems to monitor external events and have to decide whether to move. Respo...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Wiley via the DOI in this record.KEY POINTS...
All animals use sensory systems to monitor external events and have to decide whether to move. Respo...
Animal survival profoundly depends on the ability to detect stimuli in the environment, process them...
Funding: A.F. acknowledges support from the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (E...
How does the brain process sensory stimuli, and decide whether to initiate locomotor behaviour? To i...
Effective movement is central to survival and it is essential for all animals to react in response ...
We present a detailed computational model of interacting neuronal populations that mimic the hatchli...
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...
During active movements, neural replicas of the underlying motor commands may assist in adapting mot...
Vertebrate central pattern generators (CPGs) controlling locomotion contain neurons which provide th...
This research has been supported by the Royal Society, Wellcome Trust (089319), and the Biotechnolog...
Funding: The Biotechnology and the Biological Sciences Research Council grants: BB/L002353/1, BB/L00...
All animals use sensory systems to monitor external events and have to decide whether to move. Respo...
All animals use sensory systems to monitor external events and have to decide whether to move. Respo...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Wiley via the DOI in this record.KEY POINTS...
All animals use sensory systems to monitor external events and have to decide whether to move. Respo...
Animal survival profoundly depends on the ability to detect stimuli in the environment, process them...
Funding: A.F. acknowledges support from the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (E...
How does the brain process sensory stimuli, and decide whether to initiate locomotor behaviour? To i...
Effective movement is central to survival and it is essential for all animals to react in response ...
We present a detailed computational model of interacting neuronal populations that mimic the hatchli...
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...
During active movements, neural replicas of the underlying motor commands may assist in adapting mot...
Vertebrate central pattern generators (CPGs) controlling locomotion contain neurons which provide th...
This research has been supported by the Royal Society, Wellcome Trust (089319), and the Biotechnolog...