Electric fish ignore their own zaps with a cool trick 
By Talia Ogliore-WUSTL CA Source: futurity 8/25/2020



African fish called mormyrids communicate using pulses of electricity. To distinguish their own signal from those of neighboring fish, their brains inhibit sensory responses using a corollary discharge, which is an internal copy of their own motor command. (Credit: Tsunehiko Kohashi)
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Washington University in St. Louis

New research clarifies how electric fish that use zaps to communicate block their own messages out and how the trick evolved.
 

These fish generate electric pulses to communicate with other fish and sense their surroundings. Some species broadcast shorter electric pulses, while others send out long ones. But all that zip-zapping in the water can get confusing.

The fish need to filter out their own pulses so they can identify external messages and only respond to those signals.

The solution to this problem is a brain function called a corollary discharge. It’s sort of like a negative copy of the original message—something that tells the fish, “Ignore this.”

 
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