Event:
30.09.2025, 11:00 | Max Planck Institute for Biological Intelligence Campus Martinsried | ||
until 12:00
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Event Type:
Talk
Speaker: Christopher A. Zimmermann Institute: Princeton Neuroscience Institute Title: Body-brain interactions in learning |
Location:
MPI BI, Seminar room NQ105 Am Klopferspitz 18 82152 Martinsried Host: RĂ¼diger Klein |
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Abstract:
Body-to-brain communication influences nearly every aspect of our behavior, from immediate feelings of thirst or hunger to lifelong pair bonds and mood states. Yet, technical and conceptual barriers have kept the neural mechanisms that underlie these profound behavioral effects largely unexplored. My work aims to develop and apply new tools for studying how signals from the internal organs influence neural dynamics in the brains of behaving animals - with an initial focus on eating and drinking - by combining approaches from systems and computational neuroscience, physiology, biochemistry, and bioengineering. In my talk, I will first briefly describe how mouth- and gut-to-brain signals enable the brain’s thirst system to predict changes in hydration state before they occur and adjust drinking behavior preemptively. Second, I will describe in depth how delayed gut-to-brain food poisoning signals specifically reactivate the brain’s representation of flavors from a recent meal, which provides a mechanism for learning aversions to the taste of foods that make us feel sick. Together, these findings provide neural explanations for long-enigmatic elements of everyday human experience, while also revealing fundamental principles for how learning and motivation algorithms are instantiated in the brain.
Registration Link: |