Authors
Mitchell, R., Dacke, M., Webb, B.
Abstract
Dung beetles can use a variety of orientation cues to maintain a consistent bearing during ball-rolling. Where several cues are available, they appear to learn the spatial relationship between them, providing redundancy if some cues are removed. Mounting evidence indicates that such a learning process is implemented in the insect head direction circuit; specifically, in the plastic substrate between sensory input neurons and compass neurons in the central complex. This plasticity appears to be driven by rotational movements, providing a clear link with observed beetle 'dance' behaviour. Here, we extend our functional model of this circuit and use it on a robot platform, to test it in the same behavioural assay as was used for the beetles. The robot was able to replicate the beetle's ability to substitute a directional wind cue for a point source light cue in guiding straight-line movement. However, it also revealed significant biasing coupled to dance direction. This biasing appears to be caused by inherent conflict between recurrent and instantaneous inputs to the compass circuit. We predict that the real insect should experience similar issues unless it has evolved a neural mechanism to compensate.
Preprint server:
bioRxiv
The authors list and abstract were imported from bioRxiv on 01 Jul 2026.
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