Published October 5, 2016 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: Resolving coiled shapes reveals new reorientation behaviors in C. elegans

  • 1. VU University Amsterdam
  • 2. University of Toronto

Description

We exploit the reduced space of C. elegans postures to develop a novel tracking algorithm which captures both simple shapes and also self-occluding coils, an important, yet unexplored, component of 2D worm behavior. We apply our algorithm to show that visually complex, coiled sequences are a superposition of two simpler patterns: the body wave dynamics and a head-curvature pulse. We demonstrate the precise ΩΩ-turn dynamics of an escape response and uncover a surprising new dichotomy in spontaneous, large-amplitude coils; deep reorientations occur not only through classical ΩΩ-shaped postures but also through larger postural excitations which we label here as δδ-turns. We find that omega and delta turns occur independently, suggesting a distinct triggering mechanism, and are the serpentine analog of a random left-right step. Finally, we show that omega and delta turns occur with approximately equal rates and adapt to food-free conditions on a similar timescale, a simple strategy to avoid navigational bias.

Notes

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README_for_EscapeResponse.tar.txt

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Related works

Is cited by
10.7554/elife.17227 (DOI)