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Seminar✓ Recording AvailableNeuroscience

Untangling the web of behaviours used to produce spider orb webs

Andrew Gordus

Dr

John Hopkins University

Schedule
Wednesday, July 8, 2020

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Schedule

Wednesday, July 8, 2020

1:00 AM America/New_York

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Host: Systems Neuroecology

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Recording provided by the organiser.

Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Original Event

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Host

Systems Neuroecology

Duration

70 minutes

Abstract

Many innate behaviours are the result of multiple sensorimotor programs that are dynamically coordinated to produce higher-order behaviours such as courtship or architecture construction. Extendend phenotypes such as architecture are especially useful for ethological study because the structure itself is a physical record of behavioural intent. A particularly elegant and easily quantifiable structure is the spider orb-web. The geometric symmetry and regularity of these webs have long generated interest in their behavioural origin. However, quantitative analyses of this behaviour have been sparse due to the difficulty of recording web-making in real-time. To address this, we have developed a novel assay enabling real-time, high-resolution tracking of limb movements and web structure produced by the hackled orb-weaver Uloborus diversus. With its small brain size of approximately 100,000 neurons, the spider U. diversus offers a tractable model organism for the study of complex behaviours. Using deep learning frameworks for limb tracking, and unsupervised behavioural clustering methods, we have developed an atlas of stereotyped movement motifs and are investigating the behavioural state transitions of which the geometry of the web is an emergent property. In addition to tracking limb movements, we have developed algorithms to track the web’s dynamic graph structure. We aim to model the relationship between the spider’s sensory experience on the web and its motor decisions, thereby identifying the sensory and internal states contributing to this sensorimotor transformation. Parallel efforts in our group are establishing 2-photon in vivo calcium imaging protocols in this spider, eventually facilitating a search for neural correlates underlying the internal and sensory state variables identified by our behavioural models. In addition, we have assembled a genome, and are developing genetic perturbation methods to investigate the genetic underpinnings of orb-weaving behaviour. Together, we aim to understand how complex innate behaviours are coordinated by underlying neuronal and genetic mechanisms.

Topics

behavioural clusteringcalcium imagingdeep learninggenetic perturbationinvertebrateslimb trackingsensorimotor programsspider orb-webuloborus diversusweb structure

About the Speaker

Andrew Gordus

Dr

John Hopkins University

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

gorduslab.bio.jhu.edu

@elegansdiversus

Follow on Twitter/X

twitter.com/elegansdiversus

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