TopicNeuroscience
Content Overview
19Total items
12Seminars
7ePosters

Latest

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Generating parallel representations of position and identity in the olfactory system

Dana Galili
MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology
Oct 12, 2023
SeminarNeuroscience

Interplay between sensory and respiratory dynamics in the mouse olfactory system

Matt Wachowiak
University of Utah School of Medicine
Jan 31, 2022
SeminarNeuroscience

Inhibitory connectivity and computations in olfaction

Rainer Friedrich
Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research
Dec 6, 2021

We use the olfactory system and forebrain of (adult) zebrafish as a model to analyze how relevant information is extracted from sensory inputs, how information is stored in memory circuits, and how sensory inputs inform behavior. A series of recent findings provides evidence that inhibition has not only homeostatic functions in neuronal circuits but makes highly specific, instructive contributions to behaviorally relevant computations in different brain regions. These observations imply that the connectivity among excitatory and inhibitory neurons exhibits essential higher-order structure that cannot be determined without dense network reconstructions. To analyze such connectivity we developed an approach referred to as “dynamical connectomics” that combines 2-photon calcium imaging of neuronal population activity with EM-based dense neuronal circuit reconstruction. In the olfactory bulb, this approach identified specific connectivity among co-tuned cohorts of excitatory and inhibitory neurons that can account for the decorrelation and normalization (“whitening”) of odor representations in this brain region. These results provide a mechanistic explanation for a fundamental neural computation that strictly requires specific network connectivity.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Becoming what you smell: adaptive sensing in the olfactory system

Vijay Balasubramanian
University of Pennsylvania
Nov 3, 2021

I will argue that the circuit architecture of the early olfactory system provides an adaptive, efficient mechanism for compressing the vast space of odor mixtures into the responses of a small number of sensors. In this view, the olfactory sensory repertoire employs a disordered code to compress a high dimensional olfactory space into a low dimensional receptor response space while preserving distance relations between odors. The resulting representation is dynamically adapted to efficiently encode the changing environment of volatile molecules. I will show that this adaptive combinatorial code can be efficiently decoded by systematically eliminating candidate odorants that bind to silent receptors. The resulting algorithm for 'estimation by elimination' can be implemented by a neural network that is remarkably similar to the early olfactory pathway in the brain. Finally, I will discuss how diffuse feedback from the central brain to the bulb, followed by unstructured projections back to the cortex, can produce the convergence and divergence of the cortical representation of odors presented in shared or different contexts. Our theory predicts a relation between the diversity of olfactory receptors and the sparsity of their responses that matches animals from flies to humans. It also predicts specific deficits in olfactory behavior that should result from optogenetic manipulation of the olfactory bulb and cortex, and in some disease states.

SeminarNeuroscience

Generating and personalizing social behavior

Lisa Stowers
Scripps Research
May 4, 2021

Dr. Stowers obtained her PhD at Harvard University and remained there to undertake the study of olfactory-mediated behavior with Catherine Dulac. During this time she completed experiments identifying vomeronasal organ neurons as sensors for mouse pheromones. In 2002 she began independent work at The Scripps Research Institute where she remains today. Her lab is leveraging the olfactory system to identify and study the information code that underlies emotion-linked innate behavior. She has been a Pew Scholar and a Senior Scholar in Neuroscience from the Ellison Medical Foundation.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Nonlinear stimulus encoding in the olfactory system

Joseph Zak
Harvard
Dec 9, 2020
SeminarNeuroscience

Nonlinear stimulus encoding in the olfactory system

Joseph Zak
Harvard University
Dec 3, 2020
SeminarNeuroscience

Influence of cortical and neuromodulatory loops on sensory information processing and perception in the mouse olfactory system

Markus Rothermel
Dept. Chemosensation, RWTH Aachen University, Germany
Oct 12, 2020
SeminarNeuroscience

Functional and structural loci of individuality in the Drosophila olfactory circuit

Benjamin de Bivort
Harvard University
Oct 8, 2020

Behavior varies even among genetically identical animals raised in the same environment. However, little is known about the circuit or anatomical underpinnings of this individuality, though previous work implicates sensory periphery. Drosophila olfaction presents an ideal model to study the biological basis of behavioral individuality, because while the neural circuit underlying olfactory behavior is well-described and highly stereotyped, persistent idiosyncrasy in behavior, neural coding, and neural wiring have also been described. Projection neurons (PNs), which relay odor signals sensed by olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs) to deeper brain structures, exhibit variable calcium responses to identical odor stimuli across individuals, but how these idiosyncrasies relate to individual behavioral responses remains unknown. Here, using paired behavior and two-photon imaging measurements, we show that idiosyncratic calcium dynamics in both ORNs and PNs predict individual preferences for an aversive monomolecular odorant versus air, suggesting that variation at the periphery of the olfactory system determines individual preference for an odor’s presence. In contrast, PN, but not ORN, calcium responses predict individual preferences in a two-odor choice assay. Furthermore, paired behavior and immunohistochemistry measurements reveal that variation in ORN presynaptic density also predicts two-odor preference, suggesting this site is a locus of individuality where microscale circuit variation gives rise to idiosyncrasy in behavior. Our results demonstrate how a neural circuit may vary functionally and structurally to produce variable behavior among individuals.

SeminarNeuroscience

Cholinergic regulation of learning in the olfactory system

Christiane Linster
Cornell University
Jul 9, 2020

In the olfactory system, cholinergic modulation has been associated with contrast modulation and changes in receptive fields in the olfactory bulb, as well the learning of odor associations in the olfactory cortex. Computational modeling and behavioral studies suggest that cholinergic modulation could improve sensory processing and learning while preventing pro-active interference when task demands are high. However, how sensory inputs and/or learning regulate incoming modulation has not yet been elucidated. We here use a computational model of the olfactory bulb, piriform cortex (PC) and horizontal limb of the diagonal band of Broca (HDB) to explore how olfactory learning could regulate cholinergic inputs to the system in a closed feedback loop. In our model, the novelty of an odor is reflected in firing rates and sparseness of cortical neurons in response to that odor and these firing rates can directly regulate learning in the system by modifying cholinergic inputs to the system.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Functional and structural loci of individuality in the Drosophila olfactory circuit

Benjamin de Bivort
Harvard University
Jun 24, 2020

behaviour varies even among genetically identical animals raised in the same environment. However, little is known about the circuit or anatomical underpinnings of this individuality, though previous work implicates sensory periphery. Drosophila olfaction presents an ideal model to study the biological basis of behavioural individuality, because while the neural circuit underlying olfactory behaviour is well-described and highly stereotyped, persistent idiosyncrasy in behaviour, neural coding, and neural wiring have also been described. Projection neurons (PNs), which relay odor signals sensed by olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs) to deeper brain structures, exhibit variable calcium responses to identical odor stimuli across individuals, but how these idiosyncrasies relate to individual behavioural responses remains unknown. Here, using paired behaviour and two-photon imaging measurements, we show that idiosyncratic calcium dynamics in both ORNs and PNs predict individual preferences for an aversive monomolecular odorant versus air, suggesting that variation at the periphery of the olfactory system determines individual preference for an odor’s presence. In contrast, PN, but not ORN, calcium responses predict individual preferences in a two-odor choice assay. Furthermore, paired behaviour and immunohistochemistry measurements reveal that variation in ORN presynaptic density also predicts two-odor preference, suggesting this site is a locus of individuality where microscale circuit variation gives rise to idiosyncrasy in behaviour. Our results demonstrate how a neural circuit may vary functionally and structurally to produce variable behaviour among individuals.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Decoding of Chemical Information from Populations of Olfactory Neurons

Pedro Herrero-Vidal
New York University
May 6, 2020

Information is represented in the brain by the coordinated activity of populations of neurons. Recent large-scale neural recording methods in combination with machine learning algorithms are helping understand how sensory processing and cognition emerge from neural population activity. This talk will explore the most popular machine learning methods used to gather meaningful low-dimensional representations from higher-dimensional neural recordings. To illustrate the potential of these approaches, Pedro will present his research in which chemical information is decoded from the olfactory system of the mouse for technological applications. Pedro and co-researchers have successfully extracted odor identity and concentration from olfactory receptor neuron low-dimensional activity trajectories. They have further developed a novel method to identify a shared latent space that allowed decoding of odor information across animals.

ePosterNeuroscience

Computational mechanisms of odor perception and representational drift in rodent olfactory systems

Alexander Roxin, Licheng Zou

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

A Model for Representational Drift: Implications for the Olfactory System

Farhad Pashakhanloo,Alexei Koulakov

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

A Model for Representational Drift: Implications for the Olfactory System

Farhad Pashakhanloo,Alexei Koulakov

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Sequence decoding with millisecond precision in the early olfactory system

Robin Blazing & Kevin Franks

COSYNE 2023

ePosterNeuroscience

Comparative study of olfactory system ontogeny in Mus musculus and Octodon degus

Daniel Amaya, Peter Mombaerts
ePosterNeuroscience

Adult neurogenesis in the Drosophila olfactory system

Ismael Fernández-Hernández, André Fiala

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Early onset of tau pathology in the olfactory system of PS19 mice: A pathway for the progression of tauopathy in the central nervous system

Marion Dourte, Pascal Kienlen-Campard, Florence Chainiaux-Debacq, Esther Paître, Mongia Bouchoucha

FENS Forum 2024

olfactory system coverage

19 items

Seminar12
ePoster7

Share your knowledge

Know something about olfactory system? Help the community by contributing seminars, talks, or research.

Contribute content
Domain spotlight

Explore how olfactory system research is advancing inside Neuroscience.

Visit domain

Cookies

We use essential cookies to run the site. Analytics cookies are optional and help us improve World Wide. Learn more.