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For animals and humans, the ability to respond to the environment is critically dependent on the nervous system. Yet neuroscientists don’t totally understand the mechanisms by which neural information (example: heat from a stove) is translated into specific behaviors (pulling your hand away). Georgia State’s Cox Lab, led by associate professor Daniel Cox, is working to illuminate how neurons process sensory information by studying a particular type of sensory neuron in fruit flies. Why fruit flies? Genetically, they’re surprisingly similar to people. This image was created using a 3-D optical imaging technique and depicts neuronal projections — tendril-like extensions of the neuron along which impulses are transmitted — in a living fruit fly.
Image from Daniel N. Cox and Atit A. Patel
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