Skip to menu Skip to content Skip to footer

A role for sleep in optimising attention (2021-2024)

Abstract

All animal brains are prediction machines, which allows even tiny flies to effectively navigate complex environments. To predict what will happen next is important for guiding attention, but also for detecting anything surprising. This project aims to understand how prediction is optimized by sleep in Drosophila flies. We aim to use electrophysiology and calcium imaging to map visual prediction error signals across the fly brain, and then determine how genetically controlled delivery of sleep regulates the quality and distribution of these signals. This knowledge will benefit our understanding of how brains balance a capacity for prediction versus surprise, by examining how evolution has solved this difficult problem in the smallest brains.

Experts

Professor Bruno van Swinderen

Professorial Research Fellow - GL
Queensland Brain Institute
Faculty of Health, Medicine and Behavioural Sciences
Bruno van Swinderen
Bruno van Swinderen