Publication: Recording electrical activity from the brain of behaving octopus
Recording electrical activity from the brain of behaving octopus
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Gutnick, T., Neef, A., Cherninskyi, A., Ziadi-Künzli, F., Di Cosmo, A., Lipp, H.-P., & Kuba, M. J. (2023). Recording electrical activity from the brain of behaving octopus. Current Biology, 33(6), 1171-1178.e4. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2023.02.006
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Abstract
Octopuses, which are among the most intelligent invertebrates,1,2,3,4 have no skeleton and eight flexible arms whose sensory and motor activities are at once autonomous and coordinated by a complex central nervous system.5,6,7,8 The octopus brain contains a very large number of neurons, organized into numerous distinct lobes, the functions of which have been proposed based largely on the results of lesioning experiments.9,10,11,12,13 In other species, linking brain activity to behavior is done by implanting electrodes and directly cor
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Gutnick, T., Neef, A., Cherninskyi, A., Ziadi-Künzli, F., Di Cosmo, A., Lipp, H.-P., & Kuba, M. J. (2023). Recording electrical activity from the brain of behaving octopus. Current Biology, 33(6), 1171-1178.e4. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2023.02.006