Publications by authors named "Brian R Tietz"

Article Synopsis
  • Animals, like cockroaches, face hurdles in their environment that make them change how they move and stand.
  • Cockroaches use their feelers (antennae) and their eyes to assess obstacles, like deciding whether to climb over something or go around it based on how high it is.
  • Researchers found that part of the cockroach brain, called the central complex, helps process this information and affects how they decide to move in different situations.
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Earlier observations had suggested that cockroaches might show multiple patterns of leg coordination, or gaits, but these were not followed by detailed behavioral or kinematic measurements that would allow a definite conclusion. We measured the walking speeds of cockroaches exploring a large arena and found that the body movements tended to cluster at one of two preferred speeds, either very slow (<10 cm s(-1)) or fairly fast (∼30 cm s(-1)). To highlight the neural control of walking leg movements, we experimentally reduced the mechanical coupling among the various legs by tethering the animals and allowing them to walk in place on a lightly oiled glass plate.

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