TY - JOUR T1 - Evidence for selective attention in the insect brain JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/041889 SP - 041889 AU - Benjamin L. de Bivort AU - Bruno van Swinderen Y1 - 2016/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2016/02/29/041889.abstract N2 - The capacity for selective attention appears to be required for any animal responding to an environment containing multiple objects, although this has been difficult to study in smaller animals such as insects. Clear operational characteristics of attention however make study of this crucial brain function accessible to any animal model. Whereas earlier approaches have relied on freely behaving paradigms placed in an ecologically relevant context, recent tethered preparations have focused on brain imaging and electrophysiology in virtual reality environments. Insight into brain activity during attention-like behavior has revealed key elements of attention in the insect brain. Surprisingly, a variety of brain structures appear to be involved, suggesting that even in the smallest brains attention might involve widespread coordination of neural activity.HighlightsInsect behavior shows attention-like filtering and allows concurrent neural recordingRecent work finds compelling correlates of visual attention in the central complexPutative goal-directed stimulus-filtering is present in neuropils across the brain ER -