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Pattern Recognition in the Olfactory System of the Locust: Priming, Gain Control and Coding Issues

Citation

Backer, Alejandro (Alex) (2002) Pattern Recognition in the Olfactory System of the Locust: Priming, Gain Control and Coding Issues. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/3EW4-YW92. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-11212002-185244

Abstract

Object recognition requires both specificity, to ensure that stimuli with distinct behavioral relevance are distinguished, and invariance, to ensure that different instances of the same stimulus are recognized as the same under varied conditions (intensity, pitch, position,...). Psychophysical studies show that an odor can be perceived as identical over significant ranges of concentrations. Whether concentration invariance results, at least in part, from low-level neural phenomena rather than cognitive grouping is so far unknown.

I explore, firstly, the contribution of projection neurons (PNs) in the antennal lobe of the locust, the analog of the vertebrate olfactory bulb, to the recognition of odor identity across concentrations; and secondly, what role spike timing, neuronal identity, and synchronization among neuronal assemblies play in the encoding and decoding of odor information by downstream neurons.

I show the following:
A novel computerized odor delivery system capable of delivering binary mixtures in arbitrary ratios and with arbitrary timecourses selected in real-time.
The locust can recognize odors, and shows innate olfactory preferences.

PNs solve the task of encoding both odorant concentration and odorant identity, independently of concentration, in three ways. First, by multiplexing information in different response dimensions using a code that involves neuronal identity, spike timing (on a timescale slower than previously believed) and synchronization across a neuronal assembly. Second, via a novel phenomenon of experience-dependent plasticity that contributes to PNs’ invariance to concentration and sensitizes PNs after exposure to an odor at high concentration, contrary to the adaptation exhibited by receptors. Third, a phenomenon of gain control, whereby excitatory and inhibitory responses balance out massive changes in receptor activity as a function of odorant concentration, maintains the output of PNs within a small dynamic range.

A further mechanism of gain control contributing to keep the activity of early olfactory circuits relatively constant across the wide dynamic range of odorant concentrations in the air is the physical chemistry of odorant reception confers the olfactory system invariance to odorant volatility, a physical property that has hitherto been believed to play a fundamental role in an odorant’s effectiveness.

Response patterns sometimes exhibit stable representations over large composition ranges and then abrupt transitions as a function of concentration and mixture composition, suggesting the difference between “same” and “different” odors may be delineated by sharp boundaries in odor space.

Finally, how is the distributed code for odors in PN assemblies decoded? I show that although synchronization among PN assemblies does not augment stimulus information in PN temporal responses, it is necessary for the read-out of odor information by downstream neurons. In sum, early olfactory circuits appear to employ plasticity, gain control and temporal coding across synchronizing neuronal assemblies to solve the odor recognition problem across multiple concentrations.

Appendices show that the variability of PN responses is correlated across neurons, show how to produce non-cyclic Winnerless Competition (WLC) and a learning rule that causes random networks to self-organize into WLC, present an exact hypothesis test for binomial distributions, improvements to sliding-window cross-correlation and to the K-nearest neighbor classification algorithm, a combinatorial analysis of the connectivity between the locust antennal lobes and mushroom bodies, a didactic exposition of Victor and Purpura’s spike cost-based metric and an experiment showing heterogeneity along the length of the locust antenna.

Item Type:Thesis (Dissertation (Ph.D.))
Subject Keywords:learning; neurobiology; neuroscience; sensitization; Biology, and Computational and Neural Systems
Degree Grantor:California Institute of Technology
Division:Biology
Major Option:Biology
Minor Option:Computation and Neural Systems
Thesis Availability:Public (worldwide access)
Research Advisor(s):
  • Laurent, Gilles J.
Thesis Committee:
  • Koch, Christof (chair)
  • Schuman, Erin Margaret
  • Laurent, Gilles J.
  • Konishi, Masakazu
  • Perona, Pietro
Defense Date:26 April 2002
Non-Caltech Author Email:alex (AT) alumni.caltech.edu
Additional Information:Thesis title in 2002 Commencement Program listed as: Priming, Gain Control and Coding Issues in the Locust Olfactory System
Record Number:CaltechETD:etd-11212002-185244
Persistent URL:https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-11212002-185244
DOI:10.7907/3EW4-YW92
Default Usage Policy:No commercial reproduction, distribution, display or performance rights in this work are provided.
ID Code:4610
Collection:CaltechTHESIS
Deposited By: Imported from ETD-db
Deposited On:26 Nov 2002
Last Modified:30 Aug 2022 23:39

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