4.8 Article

Reading Out Olfactory Receptors: Feedforward Circuits Detect Odors in Mixtures without Demixing

Journal

NEURON
Volume 91, Issue 5, Pages 1110-1123

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2016.08.007

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Funding

  1. Harvard University
  2. DFG [MA 6176/1-1]
  3. Marie Curie Fellowship [PIOF-GA-2013-622943]
  4. Bernstein Center for Computational Neuroscience [FKZ 01GQ1002]
  5. German Excellency Initiative through the Centre for Integrative Neuroscience Tubingen [EXC307]
  6. NIH [DC011291, DC014453]
  7. National Science Foundation [PHY11-25915]

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The olfactory system, like other sensory systems, can detect specific stimuli of interest amidst complex, varying backgrounds. To gain insight into the neural mechanisms underlying this ability, we imaged responses of mouse olfactory bulb glomeruli to mixtures. We used this data to build a model of mixture responses that incorporated nonlinear interactions and trial-to-trial variability and explored potential decoding mechanisms that can mimic mouse performance when given glomerular responses as input. We find that a linear decoder with sparse weights could match mouse performance using just a small subset of the glomeruli (similar to 15). However, when such a decoder is trained only with single odors, it generalizes poorly to mixture stimuli due to nonlinear mixture responses. We show that mice similarly fail to generalize, suggesting that they learn this segregation task discriminatively by adjusting task-specific decision boundaries without taking advantage of a demixed representation of odors.

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