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昆虫中央复合体

The insect central complex.

作者信息

Turner-Evans Daniel B, Jayaraman Vivek

机构信息

Janelia Research Campus, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, 19700 Helix Drive, Ashburn, VA 20147, USA.

Janelia Research Campus, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, 19700 Helix Drive, Ashburn, VA 20147, USA.

出版信息

Curr Biol. 2016 Jun 6;26(11):R453-7. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2016.04.006.

Abstract

Hordes of tourists flock to Washington, D.C. every spring to see the cherry trees blossom. Once in the city, they must find their way to the Tidal Basin where the Japanese trees grow. Fortunately, a number of visual landmarks can help them to navigate. In 1910, the United States Congress passed The Height of Buildings Act, limiting the elevation of commercial and residential structures in D.C. to 130 feet. Thus, the 555-foot-tall Washington Monument often looms large against the horizon, serving as an anchor point to help set the tourists' sense of direction. Once their heading is set, they can lose sight of the monument behind buildings or groups of tall Scandinavian visitors and still use their internal compass to navigate to the Basin. This compass keeps track of their paces and turns and updates their sense of where they are and where they need to go. Yet while their heading informs their actions, it does not dictate them. Tourists who have been to D.C. in the past can, for example, use remembered views to alter their routes to avoid crowds. On an even finer scale, their leg movements also depend on their current state - they might increase the frequency and length of their strides if hunger pangs compete with their desire to see cherry blossoms, for example. The way in which these disparate cues and motivations influence exploration is a neuroscience mystery across creatures large and small.

摘要

每年春天,成群的游客涌入华盛顿特区观赏樱花盛开。一到这座城市,他们就得找到前往日本樱花树生长的潮汐湖的路。幸运的是,一些视觉地标可以帮助他们导航。1910年,美国国会通过了《建筑物高度法案》,将华盛顿特区商业和住宅建筑的高度限制在130英尺。因此,555英尺高的华盛顿纪念碑常常在地平线上赫然耸立,成为帮助游客确定方向感的一个锚点。一旦确定了方向,他们可能会在建筑物或一群高大的斯堪的纳维亚游客身后看不到纪念碑,但仍然可以利用他们内心的“指南针”导航前往潮汐湖。这个“指南针”记录他们的步伐和转弯,并更新他们对自己所在位置和需要前往方向的认知。然而,虽然他们的方向指引着他们的行动,但并不决定行动。例如,过去去过华盛顿特区的游客可以利用记忆中的景色改变路线以避开人群。在更细微的层面上,他们的腿部动作也取决于他们当前的状态——例如,如果饥饿感与他们观赏樱花的欲望相冲突,他们可能会增加步伐的频率和长度。这些不同的线索和动机影响探索的方式,是一个无论大小生物都存在的神经科学谜团。

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