Title : The dynamics of successive induction in larval zebrafish - Staddon_2010_J.Exp.Anal.Behav_94_261 |
Author(s) : Staddon JE , MacPhail RC , Padilla S |
Ref : J Exp Anal Behav , 94 :261 , 2010 |
Abstract :
Charles Sherrington identified the properties of the synapse by purely behavioral means-the study of reflexes-more than 100 years ago. They were subsequently confirmed neurophysiologically. Studying reflex interaction, he also showed that activating one reflex often facilitates another, antagonistic one: successive induction, which has since been demonstrated in a wide range of species, from aphids to locusts to dogs and humans. We show a particularly orderly example in zebrafish (Danio rerio) larvae; the behavior (locomotion) of larvae is low in dark and intermediate in light, but low in light and substantially higher in dark when dark followed light. A quantitative model of a simple dynamic process is described that readily captures the behavior pattern and the effects of a number of manipulations of lighting conditions. |
PubMedSearch : Staddon_2010_J.Exp.Anal.Behav_94_261 |
PubMedID: 21451752 |
Staddon JE, MacPhail RC, Padilla S (2010)
The dynamics of successive induction in larval zebrafish
J Exp Anal Behav
94 :261
Staddon JE, MacPhail RC, Padilla S (2010)
J Exp Anal Behav
94 :261