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Neuronal calcium spikes enable vector inversion in the Drosophila brain
Calcium signals in brain cells allow direction reversal in the fruit fly brain
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Abstract
Neurons can switch from firing sodium spikes to calcium spikes to invert two-dimensional mathematical vectors.
- Some neurons fire calcium spikes when hyperpolarized, a behavior not typically observed in most circuits.
- This class of neurons uses calcium spikes to achieve a ∼180° realignment between encoded vectors and the fly's internal compass signal.
- The ability to switch spike types is dependent on the T-type calcium channel Ca-α1T.
- Calcium spikes may enable vector computations in angular spaces that are otherwise inaccessible.
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