Publication | Open Access
A Combined Perceptual, Physico-Chemical, and Imaging Approach to ‘Odour-Distances’ Suggests a Categorizing Function of the Drosophila Antennal Lobe
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Citations
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References
2011
Year
Sensory ScienceSensory SystemsSocial SciencesProjection NeuronsNeural MechanismSensory NeuroscienceCombined PerceptualOlfactory PerceptionCognitive NeuroscienceMultisensory IntegrationPerception SystemCognitive ScienceImaging ApproachSemiochemicalInvertebrate VisionNervous SystemSensory ProcessingOlfactionBiologyNeurobiological MechanismNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyPhysiologyDrosophila Antennal LobeAntennal LobeNeuroscienceMedicineCalcium Sensor
How do physico-chemical stimulus features, perception, and physiology relate? Given the multi-layered and parallel architecture of brains, the question specifically is where physiological activity patterns correspond to stimulus features and/or perception. Perceived distances between six odour pairs are defined behaviourally from four independent odour recognition tasks. We find that, in register with the physico-chemical distances of these odours, perceived distances for 3-octanol and n-amylacetate are consistently smallest in all four tasks, while the other five odour pairs are about equally distinct. Optical imaging in the antennal lobe, using a calcium sensor transgenically expressed in only first-order sensory or only second-order olfactory projection neurons, reveals that 3-octanol and n-amylacetate are distinctly represented in sensory neurons, but appear merged in projection neurons. These results may suggest that within-antennal lobe processing funnels sensory signals into behaviourally meaningful categories, in register with the physico-chemical relatedness of the odours.
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