Stowasser Annette, Mohr Sarah, Buschbeck Elke, Vilinsky Ilya
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH 45221, U.S.A.;
Department of Neuroscience, Kenyon College, Gambier, OH 43022, U.S.A.;
J Undergrad Neurosci Educ. 2015 Jul 7;13(3):A234-43. eCollection 2015 Summer.
Students learn best when projects are multidisciplinary, hands-on, and provide ample opportunity for self-driven investigation. We present a teaching unit that leads students to explore relationships between sensory function and ecology. Field studies, which are rare in neurobiology education, are combined with laboratory experiments that assess visual properties of insect eyes, using electroretinography (ERG). Comprised of nearly one million species, insects are a diverse group of animals, living in nearly all habitats and ecological niches. Each of these lifestyles puts different demands on their visual systems, and accordingly, insects display a wide array of eye organizations and specializations. Physiologically relevant differences can be measured using relatively simple extracellular electrophysiological methods that can be carried out with standard equipment, much of which is already in place in most physiology laboratories. The teaching unit takes advantage of the large pool of locally available species, some of which likely show specialized visual properties that can be measured by students. In the course of the experiments, students collect local insects or other arthropods of their choice, are guided to formulate hypotheses about how the visual system of "their" insects might be tuned to the lifestyle of the species, and use ERGs to investigate the insects' visual response dynamics, and both chromatic and temporal properties of the visual system. Students are then guided to interpret their results in both a comparative physiological and ecological context. This set of experiments closely mirrors authentic research and has proven to be a popular, informative and highly engaging teaching tool.
当项目具有多学科性、实践性,并为自主探究提供充足机会时,学生的学习效果最佳。我们展示了一个教学单元,该单元引导学生探索感觉功能与生态学之间的关系。实地研究在神经生物学教育中很少见,它与实验室实验相结合,利用视网膜电图(ERG)评估昆虫眼睛的视觉特性。昆虫是一个多样化的动物群体,由近100万个物种组成,生活在几乎所有的栖息地和生态位中。这些生活方式中的每一种都对它们的视觉系统提出了不同的要求,因此,昆虫表现出各种各样的眼睛结构和特化。生理上相关的差异可以使用相对简单的细胞外电生理方法来测量,这些方法可以用标准设备进行,其中大部分在大多数生理实验室中已经具备。该教学单元利用了大量当地可得的物种,其中一些可能表现出学生可以测量的特殊视觉特性。在实验过程中,学生收集自己选择的当地昆虫或其他节肢动物,被引导对“他们的”昆虫的视觉系统如何适应该物种的生活方式提出假设,并使用视网膜电图来研究昆虫的视觉反应动态以及视觉系统的颜色和时间特性。然后引导学生在比较生理学和生态学背景下解释他们的结果。这组实验紧密反映了真实的研究,并且已被证明是一种受欢迎、信息丰富且极具吸引力的教学工具。