首页> 外文期刊>Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience >Commentary: Burst Firing in a Motion-Sensitive Neural Pathway Correlates with Expansion Properties of Looming Objects That Evoke Avoidance Behaviors
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Commentary: Burst Firing in a Motion-Sensitive Neural Pathway Correlates with Expansion Properties of Looming Objects That Evoke Avoidance Behaviors

机译:评论:运动敏感的神经通路中的突发射击与引发回避行为的隐约物体的膨胀特性相关

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What is the neural code? This essential question has been the driving force behind much research in sensory and motor neuroscience, spurring investigations of diverse animals, brain areas, and behaviors. Given that neurons generally transmit information with trains of voltage spikes, what information are these spikes representing, and how can they be interpreted? Do downstream neurons respond to spike rates, counts, times, or some combination of these parameters? How does changing the pattern of spikes change behavior? These are fundamental questions in computational and behavioral neuroscience, and the answers have been as diverse as the neurons themselves. The reflexive response of locusts to looming stimuli is a classic model in neuroethology, with a small number of neurons encoding the expanding stimulus and with spike trains resulting in a robust jump response or wing steering maneuvers. Because the neural circuit is relatively direct, from retina to muscle in only a handful of synapses, it is an excellent candidate for the study of neural coding. In this pathway, the visual expansion of a dark circle on the locust's retina, representing a looming threat, results in a train of spikes in the lobula giant motion detector (LGMD) that signal to a descending interneuron, the descending contralateral motion detector (DCMD) (Gabbiani et al., 1999 ). The DCMD then stimulates thoracic interneurons and motoneurons to initiate jump or wing-steering responses (Burrows and Fraser Rowell, 1973 ). In previous work, various parameters of the DCMD spike train, including firing rate, time of peak firing rate, and total spike count, were found to control different aspects of the jump response (Fotowat et al., 2011 ), indicating that a train of spikes from a single neuron can modulate responses in multiple ways. This multiplexing suggests that the DCMD spike train is a powerful means of motor control. Previous analysis of the DCMD response to a looming stimulus found that spike rate increases as the stimulus expands, peaking within 200 ms of the predicted collision and peaking sooner when the stimulus is moving faster. In a new study, McMillan and Gray analyzed DCMD spike trains looking for evidence of neural bursting, which they defined using specific statistics, most importantly an inter-spike interval of 200 ms before the predicted collision time). By separating the spikes in bursts from isolated spikes, they found that the increase in spike rate that occurs in the 200 ms before collision is due almost entirely to an increase in bursting, not an increase in the rate of single spikes. While the increase in bursting is intriguing, the burst activity is only of importance if it encodes some information about the stimulus. In a related insect, the cricket, burst responses of auditory neurons encode high-frequency bat calls and evoke evasive responses, while isolated spikes encode communication signals from conspecifics (Marsat and Pollack, 2006 ). The bursts in this neuron are powerful signifiers that result in specific and stereotyped behaviors, whereas the isolated spikes play a different role. Furthermore, two spikes in a burst carry significantly more information than two isolated spikes (Brenner et al., 2000 ), and thus the bursts may be sending a very specific and important signal to downstream neurons and muscles. What does bursting in the DCMD signify? To gain some clues, McMillan and Gray re-analyzed a previous data set, in which they varied the speed of the looming stimulus, and applied their burst-detection algorithm. They found that the peak firing rate of isolated spikes does not change with the stimulus velocity, but the peak firing rate of the spikes in bursts does. Similarly, firing rate of the bursts and of the spikes within the bursts peaked later when the stimulus moved faster, while the time of peak firing rate of isolated spikes did not change when stimulus velocity was varied. Both phenomena could be a result of isolated spikes clustering themselves into bursts as the stimulus looms closer, but McMillan and Gray's analysis shows that encoding of the stimulus is not just a matter of an increase in the rate of single spikes, but rather of distinct bursts appearing in the neural code at key times in a behaviorally-relevant stimulus paradigm. The bursts appear around 200 ms before collision, and do not increase their rate when the stimulus moves faster. The spikes within the bursts, however, arrive at an increased rate when stimulus velocity is increased. As this is occurring, firing rate of the isolated spikes decreases, and the amount of this decrease is negatively correlated with the stimulus velocity. Thus, the presence of bursts, which arrive at a rate similar to the locust's wingbeat (~30 Hz) and do not modulate their rate with speed, indicates that the looming stimulus is present. The speed of the looming stimulus is encoded secondarily, with spikes in the bursts arriving faster when the stimulus
机译:什么是神经密码?这个基本问题一直是在感觉和运动神经科学方面进行大量研究,推动对各种动物,大脑区域和行为进行研究的原动力。假设神经元通常通过一系列电压尖峰传输信息,这些尖峰代表什么信息,如何解释?下游神经元是否对尖峰频率,计数,时间或这些参数的某种组合做出响应?改变尖峰模式如何改变行为?这些是计算和行为神经科学中的基本问题,答案与神经元本身一样多样。蝗虫对迫在眉睫的刺激的反射反应是神经行为学的经典模型,少数神经元编码不断扩大的刺激,而尖峰训练则导致强劲的跳跃反应或机翼操纵动作。由于神经回路相对直接,仅在少数突触中从视网膜到肌肉,因此它是研究神经编码的极佳候选者。在此途径中,蝗虫视网膜上黑眼圈的视觉扩展(表示迫在眉睫的威胁)导致小叶巨动检测器(LGMD)中出现一连串尖峰,这些信号向下降的中间神经元即下降的对侧运动检测器(DCMD)发出信号(Gabbiani等,1999)。然后,DCMD刺激胸腔中神经元和运动神经元,以启动跳跃或机翼转向反应(Burrows和Fraser Rowell,1973)。在以前的工作中,发现了DCMD尖峰训练的各种参数,包括点火速率,峰值发射速率的时间和总尖峰计数,可以控制跳跃响应的不同方面(Fotowat等,2011)。来自单个神经元的尖峰信号可以多种方式调节反应。这种多路复用表明,DCMD峰值信号列是强大的电机控制手段。先前对DCMD对迫在眉睫的刺激的响应的分析发现,随着刺激的扩展,峰值速率会增加,在预计碰撞的200毫秒内达到峰值,而在刺激运动更快时会更快达到峰值。在一项新的研究中,McMillan和Gray分析了DCMD峰值序列,以寻找神经爆发的证据,他们使用特定的统计数据对这些序列进行了定义,最重要的是在预测的碰撞时间之前的峰值间隔为200 ms。通过将突发中的峰值与孤立的峰值分离,他们发现在碰撞前200毫秒内发生的峰值速率的增加几乎完全是由于突发次数的增加,而不是单个峰值的比率的增加。虽然爆发的增加很有趣,但是爆发活动只有在编码了有关刺激的一些信息时才很重要。在一种相关的昆虫中,的听觉神经元爆发反应编码高频蝙蝠鸣叫并引起逃避反应,而孤立的尖峰则编码来自特定物种的通讯信号(Marsat和Pollack,2006)。该神经元中的爆发是强大的指示符,可导致特定的和定型的行为,而孤立的尖峰起着不同的作用。此外,突发中的两个尖峰比两个孤立的尖峰携带更多的信息(Brenner et al。,2000),因此突发可能会向下游神经元和肌肉发送非常特定且重要的信号。 DCMD中的爆发表示什么?为了获得一些线索,McMillan和Gray重新分析了先前的数据集,他们在其中改变了迫在眉睫的刺激的速度,并应用了爆破检测算法。他们发现,孤立的尖峰的峰值发射速率不会随刺激速度而变化,但是突发中的尖峰的峰值发射速率会发生变化。类似地,当刺激移动得更快时,爆发和爆发中的尖峰的发射速率在随后达到峰值,而当刺激速度变化时,孤立尖峰的最高发射速率的时间不变。两种现象都可能是由于刺激临近时孤立的尖峰自身聚集成突发而造成的,但是McMillan和Gray的分析表明,刺激的编码不仅是单个尖峰发生率增加的问题,还在于不同突发的发生在与行为相关的刺激范例中的关键时刻出现在神经代码中。爆发在碰撞前约200毫秒出现,并且当刺激运动更快时不会增加爆发速率。但是,当刺激速度增加时,爆发中的尖峰会以增加的速率到达。随着这种情况的发生,孤立的尖峰的发射速率降低,并且该降低的量与刺激速度呈负相关。因此,以与蝗虫的翅膀拍动相似的速率(〜30 Hz)出现并且不随速度调节其爆发速率的爆发的存在,表明存在迫在眉睫的刺激。其次,迫在眉睫的刺激的速度被编码,当刺激出现时,突发中的尖峰会更快到达

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