CPM Seminar
Measuring and modeling stochastic behavior of simple
organisms: bacterial and worm behavior
William Ryu
Department of Physics University of Toronto
Sensory processing is a universal, complex function of biological systems,
and from a broad perspective, all cells and organisms that can move, search
for sensory information. For simple organisms this searching behavior is
typically stochastic rather than deterministic and here I will discuss how
we measure and model this random behavior by studying two model organisms:
the bacterium E. coli and the nematode C. elegans. We are interested in E.
coli because it is a model of how single cells process sensory information.
The study of how the bacteria performs taxis (movement towards sensory cues)
has been instrumental in understanding general principles of sensory
networks and here I will discuss how we determine the computation that the
bacteria performs when measuring thermal signals. We are interested in C.
elegans because it is a model of how small neuronal networks process sensory
information. C. elegans poses additional challenges to biophysicists when
discussing sensory behavior, because the potential dimensionality of the
output is so large. Here I will discuss how we deal with this challenge by
showing you examples of how we quantify, parametrize, and model worm
behavior.
Thursday, April 14th 2011, 15:30
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, R.E. Bell Conference Room (room 103)
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