ECR Spotlight – Bella Xu Ying

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Bibliographic Details
Title: ECR Spotlight – Bella Xu Ying
Source: Journal of Experimental Biology. 228
Publisher Information: The Company of Biologists, 2025.
Publication Year: 2025
Description: ECR Spotlight is a series of interviews with early-career authors from a selection of papers published in Journal of Experimental Biology and aims to promote not only the diversity of early-career researchers (ECRs) working in experimental biology but also the huge variety of animals and physiological systems that are essential for the ‘comparative’ approach. Bella Xu Ying is an author on ‘ Context-dependent coordination of movement in Tribolium castaneum larvae’, published in JEB. Bella conducted the research described in this article while a BSc student in Dr Maarten Zwart and Dr Stefan Pulver's lab at School of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of St Andrews, St Andrews, UK. Bella is investigating everything motor control, especially how nervous systems generate and modulate movements, from ions to cells to circuits to behaviour.
Document Type: Article
Language: English
ISSN: 1477-9145
0022-0949
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.250487
Accession Number: edsair.doi...........bbc93c75fdb64202bb0f86b6edf02d7a
Database: OpenAIRE
Description
Abstract:ECR Spotlight is a series of interviews with early-career authors from a selection of papers published in Journal of Experimental Biology and aims to promote not only the diversity of early-career researchers (ECRs) working in experimental biology but also the huge variety of animals and physiological systems that are essential for the ‘comparative’ approach. Bella Xu Ying is an author on ‘ Context-dependent coordination of movement in Tribolium castaneum larvae’, published in JEB. Bella conducted the research described in this article while a BSc student in Dr Maarten Zwart and Dr Stefan Pulver's lab at School of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of St Andrews, St Andrews, UK. Bella is investigating everything motor control, especially how nervous systems generate and modulate movements, from ions to cells to circuits to behaviour.
ISSN:14779145
00220949
DOI:10.1242/jeb.250487