Science – Acrobatic squirrels learn to leap and land on tree branches without falling

PUBLICITY INFORMATION FOR: Nathaniel H. Hunt, Judy Jinn, Lucia F. Jacobs, and Robert J. Full (2021). Science, https://science.sciencemag.org/content/373/6555/697, DOI: 10.1126/science.abe5753, [PDF]

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Authors

Figures from Paper

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Contact Information for Comments



Authors

Nathaniel H. Hunt. Department of Biomechanics, University of Nebraska, Omaha, Omaha, NE, USA. Phone ++1 402-417-8928

Judy Jinn. Department of Psychology, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA. Phone ++1 616-443-1252

Lucia F. Jacobs. Department of Psychology, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA. Phone  ++1 510-646-2767

Robert J. Full. Department of Integrative Biology, University of California at Berkeley, CA, USA. Phone ++1 510 642 9896 (office) or ++1 510-332-7484 (mobile) e-mail: rjfull@berkeley.edu

Center for Interdisciplinary Bio-inspiration in Education and Research Visit CiBER Center for Learning from Nature

UC Berkeley’s PolyPEDAL Lab Visit


ALL GRAPHICAL MATERIAL (movies, images) IS COPYRIGHTED AND MAY BE USED FOR NEWS PURPOSES ONLY WITH APPROPRIATE CREDIT. ALL MATERIAL FROM THE SCIENCE ARTICLE SHOULD BE CREDITED AS COPYRIGHT SCIENCE 2021. ALL OTHER MATERIAL SHOULD BE CREDITED AS STATED WITH PHOTO CREDIT IF INCLUDED.


Figures from Paper

Fig. 1 COPYRIGHT SCIENCE 2021. To view Figure 1 in full-size, please click on the image above.

Fig. 2 COPYRIGHT SCIENCE 2021. To view Figure 2 in full-size, please click on the image above.

Fig. 3 COPYRIGHT SCIENCE 2021. To view Figure 3 in full-size, please click on the image above.


Movies from Paper

Movie 1 Download here

Movie 2 Download here

Movie 3 Download here

Movie 4 Download here


Additional Images

Please click on an image to view the full-resolution version.

Photo 1: Fox squirrel in eucalyptus grove on the UC Berkeley campus. Credit: Photo by Judy Jinn, UC Berkeley.


Photo 2: Fox squirrel in eucalyptus grove on the UC Berkeley campus. Credit: Photo by Jeremy Snowden, UC Berkeley


Photo 3. Fox squirrel, apparatus, and experimenters on UC Berkeley campus. Credit: Photo by Gregory Cowley (Left to right, Nate Hunt, Judy Jinn, Lucia Jacobs and Aaron Teixeira)


Photo 4.: Fox squirrel, apparatus, and experimenters on UC Berkeley campus. Credit: Photo by Judy Jinn, UC Berkeley


Additional Movies

UC Berkeley Media Relations Video, For information about the video, contact Roxanne Makasdjian, roxannem@berkeley.edu. Download here

Movie 1

Caption: Fox squirrel maneuvering on branches on the UC Berkeley campus. Credit: Video by Lawrence Wang, UC Berkeley Download here.

Movie 2

Caption: Fox squirrel being trained on experimental apparatus on the UC Berkeley campus. Credit: Video by Nate Hunt, UC Berkeley (Judy Jinn, trainer and author) Download here.

Movie 3

Caption: Slow motion, video of a side view of a fox squirrel launching from a compliant rod. Credit: Video by Nate Hunt, UC Berkeley Download here

Movie 4

Caption: Slow motion, video of a front view of a fox squirrel launching from a compliant rod. Credit: Video by Nate Hunt, UC Berkeley Download here

Movie 5

Caption: Fox squirrel learning to leap from a compliant platform. Credit: Video by Nate Hunt, UC Berkeley

Download here

Movie 6

Caption: Fox squirrel parkouring off a vertical surface to increase stability for landing. Credit: Video by Nate Hunt, UC Berkeley Download here

Movie 7

Caption: Fox squirrel parkours off a wall and lands using its hind feet. Credit: Video by Nate Hunt, UC Berkeley

Download here

Movie 8

Caption: Fox squirrel jumps over a one meter gap. Credit: Video by Nate Hunt, UC Berkeley

Download here


Contact Information for Comments on Article from Investigators Not Involved in this Research

Professor Jake Socha (comparative biomechanics, gap-crossing)
Department of Biomedical Engineering and Mechanics
Virginia Tech University
E-mail: jjsocha@vt.edu

Professor Andrew Biewener (comparative biomechanics, mammalian jumping)
The Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology
Harvard University
E-mail: abiewener@oeb.harvard.edu

Professor Greg Byrnes (comparative biomechanics, flying squirrels)
Biology Department
Siena College
E-mail: gbyrnes@siena.edu

Professor David Carrier (comparative biomechanics, mammalian jumping)
School of Biological Sciences
University of Utah
E-mail: carrier@biology.utah.edu

 

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