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Approach or buzz off: Brain cells in fruit fly hold secret to individual odor preferences

October 6, 2015 by

Responding appropriately to the smell of food or the scent of danger can mean life or death to a fruit fly, and brain circuits are in place to make sure the fly gets it right. A research team has identified an important component in these circuits: the point at which incoming sensory information begins to be transformed into a signal that instructs a fly's response. The cells, MBONs, distill nuanced information about an odor into clear instructions: approach or flee.

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