The firing of every neuron in an animal's body has been recorded, live, for the first time. The animal was a hydra--a tiny, transparent relative of jellyfish. Instead of a brain, it has the most basic nervous system in nature, a net of neurons spread throughout its body. Even so, they know almost nothing about how the hydra's few thousand neurons create behavior. To find out, Rafael Vuste and Christophe Dupre at Columbia University, New York City, genetically modified hydra so that their neurons glowed in the presence of calcium
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