4.4 Article

Odor encoding by signals in the olfactory bulb

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 129, Issue 2, Pages 431-444

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00449.2022

Keywords

information encoding; mouse; olfactory bulb; rate encoding; temporal encoding

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To understand how information is encoded in the olfactory bulb, the authors used Shannon information theoretic methods to analyze signals from multiple glomeruli in response to six chemical odors. They found that the tuning of these signals is broad, contributing to the low amount of information available from even populations of many glomeruli. The temporal aspects of the glomerular responses also provided limited information, and the information from the lateral olfactory bulb was not additive with that of the dorsal olfactory bulb.
To understand the operation of the olfactory system, it is essential to know how information is encoded in the olfactory bulb. We applied Shannon information theoretic methods to address this, with signals from up to 57 glomeruli simultaneously optically imaged from presynaptic inputs in glomeruli in the mouse dorsal (dOB) and lateral (lOB) olfactory bulb, in response to six exemplar pure chemical odors. We discovered that, first, the tuning of these signals from glomeruli to a set of odors is remarkably broad, with a mean sparseness of 0.83 and a mean signal correlation of 0.64. Second, both of these factors contribute to the low information that is available from the responses of even populations of many tens of glomeruli, which was only 1.35 bits across 33 glomeruli on average, compared with the 2.58 bits required to perfectly encode these six odors. Third, although there is considerable interest in the possibility of temporal encoding of stimulus including odor identity, the amount of information in the temporal aspects of the presynaptic glomerular responses was low (mean 0.11 bits) and, importantly, was redundant with respect to the information available from the rates. Fourth, the information from simultaneously recorded glomeruli asymptotes very gradually and nonlinearly, showing that glomeruli do not have independent responses. Fifth, the information from a population became available quite rapidly, within 100 ms of sniff onset, and the peak of the glomerular response was at 200 ms. Sixth, the information from the lOB was not additive with that of the dOB.

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