Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. Photography
  4. News

Feast your eyes on the world’s most detailed image of a fruit fly brain

Add as a preferred source on Google
This colorful web is the most complete look yet at a fruit fly’s brain cells | Science News

The common fruit flies has never been as interesting as it is now, thanks to work coming out of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute in Maryland. Using a technique known as high-speed electron microscopy, scientists there have carried out the most detailed fruit fly brain imaging in history — and the results are both impressive and pretty darn fascinating.

Recommended Videos

The experimental neurobiologists’ work involved taking 21 million nanoscale-resolution images of the brain of a fruit fly in order to record all 100,000 nerve cells that it contains. The rainbow-colored images produced don’t just look pretty, but also lay the groundwork for future research that will establish exactly which neurons talk to one another in the fly’s brain. With plenty left to discover about how brains work, this could turn out to be revolutionary.

“At 100,000 neurons, the fruit fly’s brain is the biggest that has been imaged at this resolution to date,” Davi Bock, a neurobiologist at Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Janelia Research Campus, told Digital Trends. “We can now trace the neuronal connections making up any circuit of interest in the fly’s brain. These ‘wiring diagrams’ can then be complemented by very powerful genetic tools providing molecular, physiological, and functional data about the neurons in the circuit.”

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

As Bock notes, being able to analyze a brain with this level of completeness and high resolution can reveal new insights. For example, the team is particularly interested in the neurons which help create memories. By looking at the neurons which send messages to a part of the brain called the mushroom body, which aids with learning and memory, the researchers discovered a whole new type of neuron that plays a role in this area. They theorize that these cells could help to integrate various types of sensory information.

Such discoveries may ultimately teach us more about human brains, too. “Over and over again, principles discovered in the fruit fly have been found to hold true in a wide range of organisms, including humans,” Bock continued. “This is likely to be true of brain circuits as well.”

Next up, Bock said that the team hopes to apply “emerging automated segmentation algorithms” which can help accelerate tracing these brain circuits. They will also continue to explore the functions associated with the mushroom body.

A paper describing the work was recently published in the journal Cell.

Luke Dormehl
I'm a UK-based tech writer covering Cool Tech at Digital Trends. I've also written for Fast Company, Wired, the Guardian…
This $249 LED sign wants to fix your work-life balance
My productivity isn't worth $249... or is it?
Flipper Busy Bar

Flipper Devices has built a reputation among hackers and hardware enthusiasts with the Flipper Zero, a pocket-sized gadget capable of interacting with RFID, NFC, Bluetooth, and other wireless protocols. Now, the London-based company is taking a very different approach.

Its latest product, the Busy Bar, is a desktop productivity display designed to help users stay focused, signal their availability, and automate parts of their workflow. After being teased last year, the device is finally going on sale on July 14. While the concept is genuinely clever, its starting price of up to $249 may make many buyers think twice.

Read more
FAA clears the runway for Mach flights that could cut travel times nearly in half
New regulations could dramatically reduce travel times while keeping sonic booms under control.
Supersonic Flight Time

The dream of flying faster than the speed of sound just took a major step forward. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has announced a proposed rule that would create the first noise-based certification standards for a new generation of supersonic passenger aircraft, removing one of the biggest regulatory hurdles standing in the way of commercial Mach 1+ flights.

The goal is simple: fly faster without the boom

Read more
NotebookLM’s 60-second videos turned my doomscrolling curse into something useful
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Short videos have taken over just about every app we use. You scroll through them on X, lose track of time on Instagram, watch them on YouTube, and now even Netflix has its own bite-sized feed. So when I heard that Google was bringing the format to NotebookLM, it felt both surprising and completely inevitable at the same time.

Google has announced Short Video Overviews for NotebookLM, a feature that turns dense documents and complicated sources into 60-second vertical videos that explain key ideas. Instead of staring at pages of notes, you get a quick visual walkthrough of the concept you're trying to understand.

Read more