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Short-term memory in olfactory network dynamics

Abstract

Neural assemblies in a number of animal species display self-organized, synchronized oscillations in response to sensory stimuli in a variety of brain areas.1,2,3,4,5. In the olfactory system of insects, odour-evoked oscillatory synchronization of antennal lobe projection neurons (PNs) is superimposed on slower and stimulus-specific temporal activity patterns. Hence, each odour activates a specific and dynamic projection neuron assembly whose evolution during a stimulus is locked to the oscillation clock6,7. Here we examine, using locusts, the changes in population dynamics of projection-neuron assemblies over repeated odour stimulations, as would occur when an animal first encounters and then repeatedly samples an odour for identification or localization. We find that the responses of these assemblies rapidly decrease in intensity, while they show a marked increase in spike time precision and inter-neuronal oscillatory coherence. Once established, this enhanced precision in the representation endures for several minutes. This change is stimulus-specific, and depends on events within the antennal lobe circuits, independent of olfactory receptor adaptation: it may thus constitute a form of sensory memory. Our results suggest that this progressive change in olfactory network dynamics serves to converge, over repeated odour samplings, on a more precise and readily classifiable odour representation, using relational information contained across neural assemblies.

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Figure 1: Response intensity decreases, while coherence and spike time precision increase, over repeated odour presentations.
Figure 2: Response evolution is caused by a wide variety of stimulation regimes.
Figure 3: The tendency to oscillate in response to an odour endures for several minutes and is odour-specific.
Figure 4: The evolution in antennal lobe dynamics depends on changes within the antennal lobe.
Figure 5: Individual PN responses to odours evolve over repeated trials, leading to more accurate odour classification.

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Acknowledgements

We thank B. Smith for help with the statistical analysis of the data. This work was supported by an NRSA from the NIDCD (M.S.), and the NIDCD and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation (G.L.).

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Correspondence to Gilles Laurent.

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Stopfer, M., Laurent, G. Short-term memory in olfactory network dynamics. Nature 402, 664–668 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1038/45244

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