Widely used as a model system for studying sensory processing, rat whiskers have been much studied in isolation or in anesthetized animals because the little beasts move very fast. But now a team of neuroscientists at MIT has analyzed the sensing behavior of free-ranging rats. And the researchers uncovered some important new details. If you draw one end of a stick across a wall, you can sense the wall’s texture through the stick, but the stiffness of the stick matters. Similarly, a rat sweeps its whiskers across a rough surface, where they stick, then slip, then twang at a resonant frequency when they next get stuck. Even on smooth surfaces, the whiskers’ elasticity allows for frictional stick–slip events, which are smaller and more regular than those from rough surfaces. The researchers, led by Christopher Moore, deduce that resonance is more than just an oscillation; it provides a filter for information...
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1 April 2008
April 01 2008
Citation
Stephen G. Benka; Twitching and twanging rat whiskers. Physics Today 1 April 2008; 61 (4): 28. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.2911169
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