Greg Gage: How you can make a fruit fly eat veggies
TED Fellow Greg Gage helps kids investigate the neuroscience in their own backyards. Full bio
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pursuit of all parents,
to eat their vegetables.
cookies or ice cream
prefer sweetness.
called optogenetics
vegetables over sweets.
using fruit flies.
with fruit flies
to really understand what's going on.
are very similar to ours.
their taste preferences,
What is the baseline of the fruit fly?
our first experiment.
prefer bananas or broccoli.
which is basically an iPad for flies.
banana and broccoli
versus the broccoli,
with a small electrode
on banana versus broccoli?
visited banana the most.
and they go switch to something sweeter.
on how taste works.
of specialized neurons
that triggers a particular taste,
a signal to the brain.
what's sweet and what's bitter.
its sweet taste neurons will fire.
those same neurons stay pretty quiet.
those sweet-tasting neurons to fire
that's taking neuroscience by storm,
that these fruit flies have been modified
only certain neurons respond to light.
to the sweet taste receptors.
can control these special neurons
to a bright-colored light,
messages to the brain.
these modified fruit flies
the fruit fly eats the broccoli,
a big bright red light.
they're going to open up,
that neuron to fire,
will be sent to the brain.
a mouth aspirator,
your OptoStimmers here.
right on top of the chambers.
for them to eat broccoli,
it's tasting something sweet.
that some of these flies
the banana to the broccoli.
they're tasting something sweet.
really going after it.
to rescue broccoli
as banana to our fruit flies.
these same results
do the same thing in humans?
even work in humans?
are already being planned
and blindness using optogenetics.
can we easily trigger a light source
vegetables, it will go off?
at this time, the answer is still no.
just a taste of optogenetics
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Greg Gage - NeuroscientistTED Fellow Greg Gage helps kids investigate the neuroscience in their own backyards.
Why you should listen
As half of Backyard Brains, neuroscientist and engineer Greg Gage builds the SpikerBox -- a small rig that helps kids understand the electrical impulses that control the nervous system. He's passionate about helping students understand (viscerally) how our brains and our neurons work, because, as he said onstage at TED2012, we still know very little about how the brain works -- and we need to start inspiring kids early to want to know more.
Before becoming a neuroscientist, Gage worked as an electrical engineer making touchscreens. As he told the Huffington Post: "Scientific equipment in general is pretty expensive, but it's silly because before [getting my PhD in neuroscience] I was an electrical engineer, and you could see that you could make it yourself. So we started as a way to have fun, to show off to our colleagues, but we were also going into classrooms around that time and we thought, wouldn't it be cool if you could bring these gadgets with us so the stuff we were doing in advanced Ph.D. programs in neuroscience, you could also do in fifth grade?" His latest pieces of gear: the Roboroach, a cockroach fitted with an electric backpack that makes it turn on command, and BYB SmartScope, a smartphone-powered microscope.
Greg Gage | Speaker | TED.com