Rat videos reveal whisker secrets
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Tiny twitches of their whiskers allow rats to "see" in the dark, helping them to find their way home or back to a particularly savoury garbage pile.
Now, after years of trying, U.S. researchers said on Wednesday they have caught the whole thing on film, allowing them finally to understand what the rat whiskers are telling the brain.
"There is a huge amount of work but nobody really has understood what it is they are actually seeing with their whiskers," said Christopher Moore, a neuroscientist at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Boston, whose study appears in the journal Neuron.
"For a rodent, this is the Mercedes-Benz of high-performance sensory pathways," Moore said in a telephone interview. "They can detect things with their whiskers that we can't see."
Because these tiny whisker flicks are so rapid, researchers have been unable to isolate the micro-motions that allow rats to find their way in the dark.
Jason Ritt, a researcher in Moore's lab, has been working on the problem since 2003. He painstakingly developed a high-speed video system that captures whisker movements at a rate of 3,200 frames per second, or about 100 times faster than a home video.
FAST AND FINELY TUNED
Ritt and colleagues then had to figure out how to get the rats to perform on camera. Some of the rats were trained to sweep their whiskers against a smooth surface. Others went to a rough surface. They got a sip of chocolate milk if they hit their mark. Continued...







