Current Stimulation of the Midbrain Nucleus in Pigeons for Avian Flight Control

A number of research attempts to understand and modulate sensory and motor skills that are beyond the capability of humans have been underway. They have mainly been expounded in rodent models, where numerous reports of controlling movement to reach target locations by brain stimulation have been ach...

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Veröffentlicht in:Micromachines (Basel) 2021-06, Vol.12 (7), p.788
Hauptverfasser: Jang, Jungwoo, Baek, Changhoon, Kim, Sunhyo, Lee, Tae-Kyeong, Choi, Gwang-Jin, Shim, Shinyong, Yun, Seunghyeon, Jung, Younginha, Lee, Chae-Eun, Ko, Seunghyung, Seo, Kangmoon, Seo, Jong-Mo, Won, Moo-Ho, Kim, Sung J., Song, Yoon-Kyu
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A number of research attempts to understand and modulate sensory and motor skills that are beyond the capability of humans have been underway. They have mainly been expounded in rodent models, where numerous reports of controlling movement to reach target locations by brain stimulation have been achieved. However, in the case of birds, although basic research on movement control has been conducted, the brain nuclei that are triggering these movements have yet to be established. In order to fully control flight navigation in birds, the basic central nervous system involved in flight behavior should be understood comprehensively, and functional maps of the birds’ brains to study the possibility of flight control need to be clarified. Here, we established a stable stereotactic surgery to implant multi-wire electrode arrays and electrically stimulated several nuclei of the pigeon’s brain. A multi-channel electrode array and a wireless stimulation system were implanted in thirteen pigeons. The pigeons’ flight trajectories on electrical stimulation of the cerebral nuclei were monitored and analyzed by a 3D motion tracking program to evaluate the behavioral change, and the exact stimulation site in the brain was confirmed by the postmortem histological examination. Among them, five pigeons were able to induce right and left body turns by stimulating the nuclei of the tractus occipito-mesencephalicus (OM), nucleus taeniae (TN), or nucleus rotundus (RT); the nuclei of tractus septo-mesencephalicus (TSM) or archistriatum ventrale (AV) were stimulated to induce flight aviation for flapping and take-off with five pigeons.
ISSN:2072-666X
2072-666X
DOI:10.3390/mi12070788