Comments for PMID:17600217

Dopamine-mushroom body circuit regulates saliency-based decision-making in Drosophila.
pjhirsch said on Thu Jul 05 2007 at 02:17 UTC:
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Sci. STKE, 3 July 2007
Vol. 2007, Issue 393, p. tw234
[DOI: 10.1126/stke.3932007tw234]

EDITORS' CHOICE
Neuroscience
Decision-Making in the Fly
Peter R. Stern

Science, AAAS, Cambridge CB2 1LQ, UK

Even the humble fruit fly has choices to make and uses a rudimentary brainlike organ known as the mushroom body in the process. Zhang et al. studied choice in Drosophila while the animals were confronted with competing visual cues. Decision-making was based on two processes, one linear and the other nonlinear. The switch from linear to nonlinear decision-making involved dopamine function in the mushroom body. Without the integrity of dopamine-mushroom body circuits, flies could make simple perceptual decisions based on the subtraction of the saliency of the conflict cues (color versus position) but lost the ability to amplify the discrepancy at some crucial points.

K. Zhang, J. Guo, Y. Peng, W. Xi, A. Guo, Dopamine-mushroom body circuit regulates saliency-based decision-making in Drosophila. Science 316, 1901-1904 (2007). [Abstract] [Full Text]


Citation: P. R. Stern, Decision-Making in the Fly. Sci. STKE 2007, tw234 (2007).

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