Author:
Hein Andrew M.,Carrara Francesco,Brumley Douglas R.,Stocker Roman,Levin Simon A.
Abstract
The ability to navigate is a hallmark of living systems, from single cells to higher animals. Searching for targets, such as food or mates in particular, is one of the fundamental navigational tasks many organisms must execute to survive and reproduce. Here, we argue that a recent surge of studies of the proximate mechanisms that underlie search behavior offers a new opportunity to integrate the biophysics and neuroscience of sensory systems with ecological and evolutionary processes, closing a feedback loop that promises exciting new avenues of scientific exploration at the frontier of systems biology.
Funder
DOD | Army Research Office
James S. McDonnell Foundation
Swiss National Science Foundation
Human Frontier Science Program
Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation
Simons Foundation
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
40 articles.
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