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Olfactory Processing

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olfactory processing

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with olfactory processing across World Wide.
9 curated items6 ePosters3 Seminars
Updated about 3 years ago
9 items · olfactory processing
9 results
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Shallow networks run deep: How peripheral preprocessing facilitates odor classification

Yonatan Aljadeff
University of California, San Diego (UCSD)
Nov 8, 2022

Drosophila olfactory sensory hairs ("sensilla") typically house two olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs) which can laterally inhibit each other via electrical ("ephaptic") coupling. ORN pairing is highly stereotyped and genetically determined. Thus, olfactory signals arriving in the Antennal Lobe (AL) have been pre-processed by a fixed and shallow network at the periphery. To uncover the functional significance of this organization, we developed a nonlinear phenomenological model of asymmetrically coupled ORNs responding to odor mixture stimuli. We derived an analytical solution to the ORNs’ dynamics, which shows that the peripheral network can extract the valence of specific odor mixtures via transient amplification. Our model predicts that for efficient read-out of the amplified valence signal there must exist specific patterns of downstream connectivity that reflect the organization at the periphery. Analysis of AL→Lateral Horn (LH) fly connectomic data reveals evidence directly supporting this prediction. We further studied the effect of ephaptic coupling on olfactory processing in the AL→Mushroom Body (MB) pathway. We show that stereotyped ephaptic interactions between ORNs lead to a clustered odor representation of glomerular responses. Such clustering in the AL is an essential assumption of theoretical studies on odor recognition in the MB. Together our work shows that preprocessing of olfactory stimuli by a fixed and shallow network increases sensitivity to specific odor mixtures, and aids in the learning of novel olfactory stimuli. Work led by Palka Puri, in collaboration with Chih-Ying Su and Shiuan-Tze Wu.

SeminarNeuroscience

A novel hypothesis on the role of olfactory bulb granule cells

Veronica Egger
University of Regensburg
Nov 25, 2020

The role of granule cells in olfactory processing is surrounded by several enigmatic observations, such as the existence of reciprocal spines and the mechanisms for GABA release from them, the missing evidence for functional reciprocal connectivity, and the apparently low inhibitory drive of granule cells, both with respect to recurrent and lateral inhibition. Here, I summarize recent results with regard to GABA release, leading to a novel hypothesis on granule cell function that has the potential to resolve most of these enigmas. I predict that granule cells provide dynamically switched lateral inhibition between coactive glomerular columns and thus possibly a means of olfactory combinatorial coding.

SeminarNeuroscience

Thalamic contribution to olfactory processing

Emmanuelle Courtiol
Lyon Neuroscience Research Center, CNRS, Lyon, France
Nov 15, 2020
ePoster

The neural code controls the geometry of probabilistic inference in early olfactory processing

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

The neural code controls the geometry of probabilistic inference in early olfactory processing

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Stimulus-specific olfactory processing via nonlinear transient dynamics

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Stimulus-specific olfactory processing via nonlinear transient dynamics

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

The geometry and role of sequential activity in olfactory processing

Jonathan V. Gill, Mursel Karadas, Shy Shoham, Dmitry Rinberg

COSYNE 2023

ePoster

Early olfactory processing is necessary for the maturation of limbic-hippocampal network and recognition

Yu-Nan Chen

Neuromatch 5