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Neuroethologist studying spatial navigation in diverse species 🐝🦇🦋. For more infos visit my lab homepage: https://www.spatial-navigation.com/
Jerome Beetz









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Bumble bees can apparently play with balls, count, recognize faces, & perceive rhythm. A new study out today in @science.org argues they can also solve novel tasks spontaneously without explicit training, challenging the idea that such cognitive skills are exclusive to large-brained vertebrates.😲🐝🧪👇
Together with Daniel Münch @dahaniel.muench.bio, we contributed a review about complex neural processing across phyla - and how this allows adaptions to a dynamic environment. Enjoy reading!
Do you know an outstanding aquarist? We're hiring a Senior Aquarist to help run our cephalopod facility at Columbia University. Our team maintains a colony of 250+ cuttlefish, develops new husbandry techniques (inc transgenics) & studies cuttlefish camouflage and social behavior. 1/3 [Pls repost!]
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Problem-solving using novel solutions without explicit training is often considered a hallmark of cognitive flexibility. We investigated whether bumble bees (Bombus terrestris) could solve a novel obj...
www.science.org
Spontaneous problem-solving in bumble bees
Tessa Montague
Simon Fisher
Katrin Vogt
Check out the newest Neuroforum issue of the German Neuroscience Society and learn more about the members of the MODOLFOR research unit 5424 "Modulation in Olfaction" and their scientific interests (in German): nwg-info.de/sites/nwg-in...
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Cephalopods 🐙 can employ mirror reflections for spatial navigation. They understand the concept of the mirror and can use it to approach otherwise occluded prey. www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
zoologie.uni-greifswald.de/en/organizat... We have an open PhD position in my group for someone interested in functional morphology, biology of reproduction and evolutionary biology. Please spread the word!🧪🕷🧪🕷🧪🕷🧪
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Didn't see that the bioRxiv neuro bot posted a link to our preprint a while back! We looked at behavioral and neural responses to courtship-related tail movements in axolotls. We found support for 3 (!) different models of evolution of communication depending which data we looked at. #neuroethology
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MODOLFOR
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www.biorxiv.org/content/10.6... Our study on a bacterial symbiont of the wasp spider Argiope bruennchi is available as a preprint. Likely an intracellular bacterium with a small genome of interesting phylogenetic placement.
Graduate Position/research associate, DFG funded Project on Sperm uptake and transfer in spiders
Universität Greifswald
zoologie.uni-greifswald.de
Jerome Beetz
Place coding is environment specific, i.e., place fields of place cells remap whenever the animal traverses a different habitat. Remapping at single cellular level seems to be random but at population level there is a geometric rule as a new study suggests.🐀🗺️🧠 www.biorxiv.org/content/10.6...
The 75th cohort of Grass Fellows arrived in Woods Hole this week to begin their residency in the Grass Laboratory. More info here: go.mbl.edu/grass-75-years
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www.biorxiv.org
Gabriele Uhl
www.biorxiv.org
The 75th cohort of Grass Fellows arrived in Woods Hole this week to begin their residency in the Grass Laboratory. Since 1951, the Grass Fellowship Program has brought early-career investigators to the Grass Laboratory at the Marine Biological Laborator...
go.mbl.edu
Gabriele Uhl
75 Years of Grass Fellows at the MBL | Marine Biological Laboratory
HL Eisthen, defective human product
Leaf-mimicking katydids don’t just use their funky camouflage to survive, they’re using it to find love too! 🥰🍃💘 New paper out now in #ProcB @royalsocietypublishing.org (Photo cred: Christian Ziegler): doi.org/10.1098/rspb... 1/n
International Society for Neuroethology
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Mirror-mediated localization of hidden objects is well documented in vertebrates1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12 but has never been demonstrated in inverteb…
www.sciencedirect.com
Octopus bimaculoides can learn to utilize a mirror to localize a reward outside the line of sight
Marine Biological Laboratory
Benito Wainwright
Mechanosensory Signaling in Axolotl Courtship and Evolution of Communication https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.64898/2026.04.13.718269v1
1mo
bioRxiv Neuroscience