Publications by authors named "Cody Loomis"

Ingestive behavior is driven by negative internal hunger and thirst states, as well as by positive expected rewards. Although the neural substrates underlying feeding and drinking behaviors have been widely investigated, they have primarily been studied in isolation, even though eating can also trigger thirst, and vice versa. Thus, it is still unclear how the brain encodes body states, recalls the memory of food and water reward outcomes, generates feeding/drinking motivation, and triggers ingestive behavior.

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Stress responses are conserved physiological and behavioral outcomes as a result of facing potentially harmful stimuli, yet in pathological states, stress becomes debilitating. Stress responses vary considerably throughout the animal kingdom, but how these responses are shaped evolutionarily is unknown. The Mexican cavefish has emerged as a powerful system for examining genetic principles underlying behavioral evolution.

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A shift in environmental conditions impacts the evolution of complex developmental and behavioral traits. The Mexican cavefish, , is a powerful model for examining the evolution of development, physiology, and behavior because multiple cavefish populations can be compared to an extant, ancestral-like surface population of the same species. Many behaviors have diverged in cave populations of , and previous studies have shown that cavefish have a loss of sleep, reduced stress, an absence of social behaviors, and hyperphagia.

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Responding appropriately to stressful stimuli is essential for survival of an organism. Extensive research has been done on a wide spectrum of stress-related diseases and psychiatric disorders, yet further studies into the genetic and neuronal regulation of stress are still required to develop better therapeutics. The zebrafish provides a powerful genetic model to investigate the neural underpinnings of stress, as there exists a large collection of mutant and transgenic lines.

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