Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Gwyneth M. Card is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Gwyneth M. Card.


Current Opinion in Neurobiology | 2012

Escape behaviors in insects.

Gwyneth M. Card

Escape behaviors are, by necessity, fast and robust, making them excellent systems with which to study the neural basis of behavior. This is especially true in insects, which have comparatively tractable nervous systems and members who are amenable to manipulation with genetic tools. Recent technical developments in high-speed video reveal that, despite their short duration, insect escape behaviors are more complex than previously appreciated. For example, before initiating an escape jump, a fly performs sophisticated posture and stimulus-dependent preparatory leg movements that enable it to jump away from a looming threat. This newfound flexibility raises the question of how the nervous system generates a behavior that is both rapid and flexible. Recordings from the cricket nervous system suggest that synchrony between the activity of specific interneuron pairs may provide a rapid cue for the cricket to detect the direction of an approaching predator and thus which direction it should run. Technical advances make possible wireless recording from neurons while locusts escape from a looming threat, enabling, for the first time, a direct correlation between the activity of multiple neurons and the time-course of an insect escape behavior.


eLife | 2016

Visual projection neurons in the Drosophila lobula link feature detection to distinct behavioral programs

Ming Wu; Aljoscha Nern; W. Ryan Williamson; Mai M Morimoto; Michael B. Reiser; Gwyneth M. Card; Gerald M. Rubin

Visual projection neurons (VPNs) provide an anatomical connection between early visual processing and higher brain regions. Here we characterize lobula columnar (LC) cells, a class of Drosophila VPNs that project to distinct central brain structures called optic glomeruli. We anatomically describe 22 different LC types and show that, for several types, optogenetic activation in freely moving flies evokes specific behaviors. The activation phenotypes of two LC types closely resemble natural avoidance behaviors triggered by a visual loom. In vivo two-photon calcium imaging reveals that these LC types respond to looming stimuli, while another type does not, but instead responds to the motion of a small object. Activation of LC neurons on only one side of the brain can result in attractive or aversive turning behaviors depending on the cell type. Our results indicate that LC neurons convey information on the presence and location of visual features relevant for specific behaviors. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.21022.001


Cell | 2017

Mapping the Neural Substrates of Behavior

Alice A. Robie; Jonathan Hirokawa; Austin W. Edwards; Lowell Umayam; Allen Lee; Mary L. Phillips; Gwyneth M. Card; Wyatt Korff; Gerald M. Rubin; Julie H. Simpson; Michael B. Reiser; Kristin Branson

Assigning behavioral functions to neural structures has long been a central goal in neuroscience and is a necessary first step toward a circuit-level understanding of how the brain generates behavior. Here, we map the neural substrates of locomotion and social behaviors for Drosophila melanogaster using automated machine-vision and machine-learning techniques. From videos of 400,000 flies, we quantified the behavioral effects of activating 2,204 genetically targeted populations of neurons. We combined a novel quantification of anatomy with our behavioral analysis to create brain-behavior correlation maps, which are shared as browsable web pages and interactive software. Based on these maps, we generated hypotheses of regions of the brain causally related to sensory processing, locomotor control, courtship, aggression, and sleep. Our maps directly specify genetic tools to target these regions, which we used to identify a small population of neurons with a role in the control of walking.


Neuron | 2017

Feature Integration Drives Probabilistic Behavior in the Drosophila Escape Response

Catherine R. von Reyn; Aljoscha Nern; W. Ryan Williamson; Patrick Breads; Ming Wu; Shigehiro Namiki; Gwyneth M. Card

Animals rely on dedicated sensory circuits to extract and encode environmental features. How individual neurons integrate and translate these features into behavioral responses remains a major question. Here, we identify a visual projection neuron type that conveys predator approach information to the Drosophila giant fiber (GF) escape circuit. Genetic removal of this input during looming stimuli reveals that it encodes angular expansion velocity, whereas other input cell type(s) encode angular size. Motor program selection and timing emerge from linear integration of these two features within the GF. Linear integration improves size detection invariance over prior models and appropriately biases motor selection to rapid, GF-mediated escapes during fast looms. Our findings suggest feature integration, and motor control may occur as simultaneous operations within the same neuron and establish the Drosophila escape circuit as a model system in which these computations may be further dissected at the circuit level. VIDEO ABSTRACT.


Nature | 2017

Ultra-selective looming detection from radial motion opponency

Nathan C. Klapoetke; Aljoscha Nern; Martin Y. Peek; Edward M. Rogers; Patrick Breads; Gerald M. Rubin; Michael B. Reiser; Gwyneth M. Card

Nervous systems combine lower-level sensory signals to detect higher-order stimulus features critical to survival, such as the visual looming motion created by an imminent collision or approaching predator. Looming-sensitive neurons have been identified in diverse animal species. Different large-scale visual features such as looming often share local cues, which means loom-detecting neurons face the challenge of rejecting confounding stimuli. Here we report the discovery of an ultra-selective looming detecting neuron, lobula plate/lobula columnar, type II (LPLC2) in Drosophila, and show how its selectivity is established by radial motion opponency. In the fly visual system, directionally selective small-field neurons called T4 and T5 form a spatial map in the lobula plate, where they each terminate in one of four retinotopic layers, such that each layer responds to motion in a different cardinal direction. Single-cell anatomical analysis reveals that each arm of the LPLC2 cross-shaped primary dendrites ramifies in one of these layers and extends along that layer’s preferred motion direction. In vivo calcium imaging demonstrates that, as their shape predicts, individual LPLC2 neurons respond strongly to outward motion emanating from the centre of the neuron’s receptive field. Each dendritic arm also receives local inhibitory inputs directionally selective for inward motion opposing the excitation. This radial motion opponency generates a balance of excitation and inhibition that makes LPLC2 non-responsive to related patterns of motion such as contraction, wide-field rotation or luminance change. As a population, LPLC2 neurons densely cover visual space and terminate onto the giant fibre descending neurons, which drive the jump muscle motor neuron to trigger an escape take off. Our findings provide a mechanistic description of the selective feature detection that flies use to discern and escape looming threats.


Current Opinion in Neurobiology | 2016

Comparative approaches to escape

Martin Y. Peek; Gwyneth M. Card

Neural circuits mediating visually evoked escape behaviors are promising systems in which to dissect the neural basis of behavior. Behavioral responses to predator-like looming stimuli, and their underlying neural computations, are remarkably similar across species. Recently, genetic tools have been applied in this classical paradigm, revealing novel non-cortical pathways that connect loom processing to defensive behaviors in mammals and demonstrating that loom encoding models from locusts also fit vertebrate neural responses. In both invertebrates and vertebrates, relative spike-timing in descending pathways is a mechanism for escape behavior choice. Current findings suggest that experimentally tractable systems, such as Drosophila, may be applicable models for sensorimotor processing and persistent states in higher organisms.


eLife | 2018

The functional organization of descending sensory-motor pathways in Drosophila

Shigehiro Namiki; Michael H. Dickinson; Allan M. Wong; Wyatt Korff; Gwyneth M. Card

In most animals, the brain controls the body via a set of descending neurons (DNs) that traverse the neck. DN activity activates, maintains or modulates locomotion and other behaviors. Individual DNs have been well-studied in species from insects to primates, but little is known about overall connectivity patterns across the DN population. We systematically investigated DN anatomy in Drosophila melanogaster and created over 100 transgenic lines targeting individual cell types. We identified roughly half of all Drosophila DNs and comprehensively map connectivity between sensory and motor neuropils in the brain and nerve cord, respectively. We find the nerve cord is a layered system of neuropils reflecting the fly’s capability for two largely independent means of locomotion -- walking and flight -- using distinct sets of appendages. Our results reveal the basic functional map of descending pathways in flies and provide tools for systematic interrogation of neural circuits.


eLife | 2018

Optogenetic dissection of descending behavioral control in Drosophila

Jessica Cande; Shigehiro Namiki; Jirui Qiu; Wyatt Korff; Gwyneth M. Card; Joshua W. Shaevitz; David L. Stern; Gordon Berman

In most animals, the brain makes behavioral decisions that are transmitted by descending neurons to the nerve cord circuitry that produces behaviors. In insects, only a few descending neurons have been associated with specific behaviors. To explore how descending neurons control an insect’s movements, we developed a novel method to systematically assay the behavioral effects of activating individual neurons on freely behaving terrestrial D. melanogaster. We calculated a two-dimensional representation of the entire behavior space explored by these flies, and we associated descending neurons with specific behaviors by identifying regions of this space that were visited with increased frequency during optogenetic activation. Applying this approach across a large collection of descending neurons, we found that (1) activation of most of the descending neurons drove stereotyped behaviors, (2) in many cases multiple descending neurons activated similar behaviors, and (3) optogenetically activated behaviors were often dependent on the behavioral state prior to activation.


bioRxiv | 2017

A Systematic Nomenclature for the Drosophila Ventral Nervous System

Robert Court; James Douglas Armstrong; Jana Borner; Gwyneth M. Card; Marta Costa; Michael H. Dickinson; Carsten Duch; Wyatt Korff; Richard S. Mann; David J. Merritt; Rod Murphey; Shigehiro Namiki; Andrew M. Seeds; David Shepherd; Troy R. Shirangi; Julie H. Simpson; James W. Truman; John C. Tuthill; Darren W. Williams

Insect nervous systems are proven and powerful model systems for neuroscience research with wide relevance in biology and medicine. However, descriptions of insect brains have suffered from a lack of a complete and uniform nomenclature. Recognising this problem the Insect Brain Name Working Group produced the 1rst agreed hierarchical nomenclature system for the adult insect brain, using Drosophila melanogaster as the reference framework, with other insect taxa considered to ensure greater consistency and expandability (Ito et al., 2014). Ito et al. (2014) purposely focused on the gnathal regions that account for approximately 50% of the adult CNS. We extend this nomenclature system to the sub-gnathal regions of the adult Drosophila nervous system to provide a nomenclature of the so-called ventral nervous system (VNS), which includes the thoracic and abdominal neuromeres that was not included in the original work and contains the neurons that play critical roles underpinning most 2y behaviours.


Nature Communications | 2018

Speed dependent descending control of freezing behavior in Drosophila melanogaster

Ricardo Zacarias; Shigehiro Namiki; Gwyneth M. Card; Maria Luisa Vasconcelos; Marta A. Moita

The most fundamental choice an animal has to make when it detects a threat is whether to freeze, reducing its chances of being noticed, or to flee to safety. Here we show that Drosophila melanogaster exposed to looming stimuli in a confined arena either freeze or flee. The probability of freezing versus fleeing is modulated by the fly’s walking speed at the time of threat, demonstrating that freeze/flee decisions depend on behavioral state. We describe a pair of descending neurons crucially implicated in freezing. Genetic silencing of DNp09 descending neurons disrupts freezing yet does not prevent fleeing. Optogenetic activation of both DNp09 neurons induces running and freezing in a state-dependent manner. Our findings establish walking speed as a key factor in defensive response choices and reveal a pair of descending neurons as a critical component in the circuitry mediating selection and execution of freezing or fleeing behaviors.Looming discs are perceived as an innate threat by flies and elicit a survival response. Here, the authors report that flies exhibit either an escape or freezing response depending on their walking speed and identify the involvement of a pair of neurons in mediating the behavior.

Collaboration


Dive into the Gwyneth M. Card's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michael H. Dickinson

California Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Shigehiro Namiki

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Wyatt Korff

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Aljoscha Nern

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gerald M. Rubin

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michael B. Reiser

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ebraheem I. Fontaine

California Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Julie H. Simpson

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ming Wu

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Richard M. Murray

California Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge