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only show parts of the cell, which are close to the substrate, and do not show parts of the cell far away from the substrate. So, the images can be misleading: e.g. the final images right before the left
Section: FB1
forage. However, under starvation conditions, Physarum produces small fragments, satellites, that move away radially from the point of inoculation. Since this alternative growth progression, termed a search
transition does not occur. Instead, several bodies on the millimeter scale form and migrate radially away from the site of inoculation. We term these motile mesoplasmodia satellites. A satellite growth is
these response patterns, we conducted closed-loop image synthesis experiments; specifically, we “threw away” the photograph and attempted to recover it using image generators (generative adversarial networks)