John Crimaldi News /ceae/ en Professor John P. Crimaldi lead author on report that shines light on what comes up when you flush /ceae/2022/12/08/professor-john-p-crimaldi-lead-author-report-shines-light-what-comes-when-you-flush Professor John P. Crimaldi lead author on report that shines light on what comes up when you flush Anonymous (not verified) Thu, 12/08/2022 - 08:43 Tags: John Crimaldi News News Using bright green lasers and camera equipment, a team of CU Â鶹ӰԺ engineers ran an experiment to reveal how tiny water droplets, invisible to the naked eye, are rapidly ejected into the air when a lid-less, public restroom toilet is flushed. Now published in Scientific Reports, it is the first study to directly visualize the resulting aerosol plume and measure the speed and spread of particles within it. window.location.href = `/today/2022/12/08/cu-scientists-shine-light-what-comes-when-you-flush`;

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Thu, 08 Dec 2022 15:43:33 +0000 Anonymous 3044 at /ceae
Illuminating the brain one neuron and synapse at a time—5 essential reads /ceae/2022/08/08/illuminating-brain-one-neuron-and-synapse-time-5-essential-reads Illuminating the brain one neuron and synapse at a time—5 essential reads Anonymous (not verified) Mon, 08/08/2022 - 12:08 Tags: Hydrology, Water Resources & Environmental Fluid Mechanics John Crimaldi News

From figuring out where memories are stored to how sensory information translates to behavior, new technologies are helping neuroscientists better understand how the brain works. Hear from several experts, including CU Professor John Crimaldi, on The Conversation.

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Mon, 08 Aug 2022 18:08:43 +0000 Anonymous 2956 at /ceae
Video: Learn about the Odor2Action Network led by CU Â鶹ӰԺ /ceae/2022/03/15/video-learn-about-odor2action-network-led-cu-boulder Video: Learn about the Odor2Action Network led by CU Â鶹ӰԺ Anonymous (not verified) Tue, 03/15/2022 - 09:10 Tags: Hydrology, Water Resources & Environmental Fluid Mechanics John Crimaldi News

CU Â鶹ӰԺ is leading a groundbreaking new international research network dubbed  The work is aimed at understanding how animals use information from odors in their environment to guide behavior and has far-ranging implications for our understanding of the human brain. The research is part of the Next Generation Networks for Neuroscience (NeuroNex) Program. And over the next five years 16 scientists from 16 prestigious institutions around the world will work together through the network. The project is funded by a $20.2 million joint award from the National Science Foundation, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and the UK Research and Innovation Medical Research Council.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d4dZSXefJaE&list=PLGVe6BxyFHNXjnQVsj-SxybENHzJ3Azhw&index=30]

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Tue, 15 Mar 2022 15:10:48 +0000 Anonymous 2853 at /ceae
The Conversation: From odor to action – how smells are processed in the brain and influence behavior /ceae/2022/01/26/conversation-odor-action-how-smells-are-processed-brain-and-influence-behavior The Conversation: From odor to action – how smells are processed in the brain and influence behavior Anonymous (not verified) Wed, 01/26/2022 - 10:19 Tags: Engineering Science Hydrology, Water Resources & Environmental Fluid Mechanics John Crimaldi News

A dog raises its nose in the air before chasing after a scent. A mosquito zigzags back and forth before it lands on your arm for its next meal. What these behaviors have in common is that they help these animals “see” their world through their noses.

While humans primarily use their vision to navigate their environment, the vast majority of organisms on Earth communicate and experience the world through – their sense of smell.

, an international network of over 50 scientists and students using olfaction to study brain function in animals. Our goal is to understand a fundamental question in neuroscience: How do animal brains translate information from their environments to changes in their behaviors?

Here, we trace the interconnections between smells and behaviors – looking at how behavior influences odor detection, how the brain processes sensory information from smells and how this information triggers new behaviors.

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  Visualizing what smells look like helps researchers design technologies that detect odors as well as a dog can.

Detecting odors in the environment

When the odor of a flower is released into the air, it takes the shape of a wind-borne . It encounters physical obstacles and temperature differences as it flows through space. These interactions create turbulence that splits the odor plume into thin threads that spread out as the scent moves away from its source. These filaments eventually reach an animal’s nose or an insect’s antenna.

Odors that are broken up into filaments present a challenge to animals using them to find food or mates or avoid threats. It becomes difficult to predict precisely where the odor is coming from. Is the source directly ahead, to the left or right, above or below?

  This video by the Crimaldi Laboratory of the Â鶹ӰԺ shows an odor plume developing behind a moving source over time. The source moves up and down from the left side, and the odor flows from left to right.

To work around this, animals have evolved what are called behaviors that improve their ability to detect and find odors in the environment.

When a fly detects the smell of fruit or a mosquito detects carbon dioxide from a possible host, for example, both insects first move upwind to get closer to the odor of the food source. They then move in a meandering, back-and-forth motion called casting to find more odor threads before surging upwind again. If they lose the scent, they’ll start casting again until they find the scent. Larger animals, such as mice and dogs, also alternate between more directed movements and more exploratory searching actions.

Animals also move their noses and antennae to improve the chances that they’ll encounter an odor. This is why dogs raise their noses in the air to increase the amount of odor they can sniff, and why insects move their antennae to stir up and penetrate the air to make better contact with odor molecules.

Once information from odors tell the animal that they’re close to the source, visual searching then comes into play.

Making sense of odors

When an animal comes into contact with an odor plume, it detects the presence of these odor molecules through tiny proteins called . These receptors are embedded in the sensory neurons lining its nasal cavity or antennae.

Each sensory neuron contains only one type of odorant receptor. And each type of odorant receptor has a different shape and set of chemical properties that determine which odors can bind to and activate it. Most of these receptors recognize multiple odors, and most odors can bind to multiple different receptors. What encodes the identity of a specific odor in the brain is determined by which combination of receptors are activated, and their relative strength of activation.

  This video from the Wachowiak Lab at the University of Utah shows the activity of the olfactory bulb in a mouse brain as the mouse is exposed to different odors. Different odors make different combinations of neurons in the olfactory bulb light up.

An animal like a mouse has about a of odorant receptors. Having a large number of these receptors with diverse shapes allows the system to detect and distinguish between a very large number of chemically unique odors, including ones the animal has never encountered before. Most odors in the environment are often a mix of many different types of molecules. The smell of some can be a blend of over 100 different chemical compounds.

Once an odor molecule binds to a receptor, sensory neurons send specific into compartments of the brain called . Different odors elicit distinct patterns of electrical activity across these regions, and this generates a specific neural representation of the odor in the brain.

An important step toward understanding olfaction is figuring out how different classes of odors map to different patterns of electrical signals in the brain.

Neuroscientists hypothesize that as these signals undergo successive stages of processing deep in the brain, sensory representations of odor are in ways that extract information most useful to survival. This could be whether the smell is coming from something nutritious, indicating a potential source of food, or it could help the animal identify whether the smell is coming from a potential competitor or predator.

These reformatted sensory representations form the basis for how animals perceive smell and determine what actions they take in response to this information.

From odor to action

Once information about a particular odor reaches the brain, it often elicits both instinctual and learned . Odors that signal danger may trigger the animal to freeze or run away, while odors from a member of the same species may trigger the animal to mark its territory or initiate courtship.

In many cases, animals perform these tasks with incredible . It’s still common to use search dogs to find lost people and pigs to find truffles because available technologies aren’t capable of performing as well.

Animals achieve this level of performance not just because they’re able to detect and identify an odor. They’re also able to integrate odor features, like how intense the odor smells, with environmental clues, like wind direction, and internal cues, like hunger. All this information comes together to generate specific sequences of behaviors such as “face into the wind and then walk forward.”

  Dogs rely on smells to provide long-distance information. Humans, on the other hand, use smells for short distances.

To understand how odor guides these behaviors, scientists measure or manipulate an animal’s brain activity as they perform specific actions. This is done using imaging, electrophysiology or , which selectively activates specific neurons by shining a light on them. These approaches allow researchers to understand how patterns of brain activity shift when an animal changes its behavior to chase after an odor, or how environmental and internal cues combine to produce a best guess on the location of its next meal.

Leading science and technology by the nose

The olfactory system offers a unique opportunity to understand how the brain processes environmental information and translates it to behavior. Compared to other areas of the brain, the olfactory circuit is simpler in structure and uses fewer stages of processing. Its relative simplicity is what allows scientists like us to study it from end to end and learn how the brain works as a whole.

    Robots may one day be able to replace dogs in search and rescue situations.

Understanding brain function through the lens of olfaction could also pave the way for transformative developments in engineering, neuroscience and public health. Our research should accelerate the development of robots with that can use odors to search for , and leaking from pipelines in environments where it may be tedious or dangerous for humans or animals to go. Robots might also be able to search for missing people or disaster victims, something typically done with .

An exciting future in scientific and medical development, we believe, is right under our noses.

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Wed, 26 Jan 2022 17:19:35 +0000 Anonymous 2789 at /ceae
Buff Innovator Insights Podcast with Professor John Crimaldi /ceae/2021/09/02/buff-innovator-insights-podcast-professor-john-crimaldi Buff Innovator Insights Podcast with Professor John Crimaldi Anonymous (not verified) Thu, 09/02/2021 - 10:16 Tags: Faculty News John Crimaldi News

In this episode, we’ll meet Dr. John Crimaldi, a professor in the Department of Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering. We’ll learn about his early fascination with sailing and how it set the course for his lifelong interest in fluid mechanics. As the Network Lead for the ambitious project, he also tells us about this international network working to understand how brains organize and process information from odors to guide behaviors.

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Thu, 02 Sep 2021 16:16:50 +0000 Anonymous 2575 at /ceae