How the insect central complex could coordinate multimodal navigation.

Elife

Sheffield Robotics, Department of Computer Science, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, United Kingdom.

Published: December 2021

The central complex of the insect midbrain is thought to coordinate insect guidance strategies. Computational models can account for specific behaviours, but their applicability across sensory and task domains remains untested. Here, we assess the capacity of our previous model (Sun et al. 2020) of visual navigation to generalise to olfactory navigation and its coordination with other guidance in flies and ants. We show that fundamental to this capacity is the use of a biologically plausible neural copy-and-shift mechanism that ensures sensory information is presented in a format compatible with the insect steering circuit regardless of its source. Moreover, the same mechanism is shown to allow the transfer cues from unstable/egocentric to stable/geocentric frames of reference, providing a first account of the mechanism by which foraging insects robustly recover from environmental disturbances. We propose that these circuits can be flexibly repurposed by different insect navigators to address their unique ecological needs.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8741217PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.73077DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

central complex
8
insect
5
insect central
4
complex coordinate
4
coordinate multimodal
4
multimodal navigation
4
navigation central
4
complex insect
4
insect midbrain
4
midbrain thought
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!