The head direction circuit of two insect species

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Abstract

Recent studies of the Central Complex in the brain of the fruit fly have identified neurons with activity that tracks the animal’s heading direction. These neurons are part of a neuronal circuit with dynamics resembling those of a ring attractor. Other insects have a homologous circuit sharing a generally similar topographic structure but with significant structural and connectivity differences. We model the connectivity patterns in two insect species to investigate the effect of the differences on the dynamics of the circuit. We illustrate that the circuit found in locusts can also operate as a ring attractor and identify differences that enable the fruit fly circuit to respond faster to heading changes while they render the locust circuit more tolerant to noise. Our findings demonstrate that subtle differences in neuronal projection patterns can have a significant effect on the circuit performance and emphasise the need for a comparative approach in neuroscience.

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europepmc
last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00