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Understanding Odor Information Segregation in the Olfactory Bulb by Means of Mitral and Tufted Cells

Odor identification is one of the main tasks of the olfactory system. It is performed almost independently from the concentration of the odor providing a robust recognition. This capacity to ignore concentration information does not preclude the olfactory system from estimating concentration itself....

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Autores principales: Polese, Davide, Martinelli, Eugenio, Marco, Santiago, Di Natale, Corrado, Gutierrez-Galvez, Agustin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4214673/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25356586
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0109716
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author Polese, Davide
Martinelli, Eugenio
Marco, Santiago
Di Natale, Corrado
Gutierrez-Galvez, Agustin
author_facet Polese, Davide
Martinelli, Eugenio
Marco, Santiago
Di Natale, Corrado
Gutierrez-Galvez, Agustin
author_sort Polese, Davide
collection PubMed
description Odor identification is one of the main tasks of the olfactory system. It is performed almost independently from the concentration of the odor providing a robust recognition. This capacity to ignore concentration information does not preclude the olfactory system from estimating concentration itself. Significant experimental evidence has indicated that the olfactory system is able to infer simultaneously odor identity and intensity. However, it is still unclear at what level or levels of the olfactory pathway this segregation of information occurs. In this work, we study whether this odor information segregation is performed at the input stage of the olfactory bulb: the glomerular layer. To this end, we built a detailed neural model of the glomerular layer based on its known anatomical connections and conducted two simulated odor experiments. In the first experiment, the model was exposed to an odor stimulus dataset composed of six different odorants, each one dosed at six different concentrations. In the second experiment, we conducted an odor morphing experiment where a sequence of binary mixtures going from one odor to another through intermediate mixtures was presented to the model. The results of the experiments were visualized using principal components analysis and analyzed with hierarchical clustering to unveil the structure of the high-dimensional output space. Additionally, Fisher's discriminant ratio and Pearson's correlation coefficient were used to quantify odor identity and odor concentration information respectively. Our results showed that the architecture of the glomerular layer was able to mediate the segregation of odor information obtaining output spiking sequences of the principal neurons, namely the mitral and external tufted cells, strongly correlated with odor identity and concentration, respectively. An important conclusion is also that the morphological difference between the principal neurons is not key to achieve odor information segregation.
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spelling pubmed-42146732014-11-05 Understanding Odor Information Segregation in the Olfactory Bulb by Means of Mitral and Tufted Cells Polese, Davide Martinelli, Eugenio Marco, Santiago Di Natale, Corrado Gutierrez-Galvez, Agustin PLoS One Research Article Odor identification is one of the main tasks of the olfactory system. It is performed almost independently from the concentration of the odor providing a robust recognition. This capacity to ignore concentration information does not preclude the olfactory system from estimating concentration itself. Significant experimental evidence has indicated that the olfactory system is able to infer simultaneously odor identity and intensity. However, it is still unclear at what level or levels of the olfactory pathway this segregation of information occurs. In this work, we study whether this odor information segregation is performed at the input stage of the olfactory bulb: the glomerular layer. To this end, we built a detailed neural model of the glomerular layer based on its known anatomical connections and conducted two simulated odor experiments. In the first experiment, the model was exposed to an odor stimulus dataset composed of six different odorants, each one dosed at six different concentrations. In the second experiment, we conducted an odor morphing experiment where a sequence of binary mixtures going from one odor to another through intermediate mixtures was presented to the model. The results of the experiments were visualized using principal components analysis and analyzed with hierarchical clustering to unveil the structure of the high-dimensional output space. Additionally, Fisher's discriminant ratio and Pearson's correlation coefficient were used to quantify odor identity and odor concentration information respectively. Our results showed that the architecture of the glomerular layer was able to mediate the segregation of odor information obtaining output spiking sequences of the principal neurons, namely the mitral and external tufted cells, strongly correlated with odor identity and concentration, respectively. An important conclusion is also that the morphological difference between the principal neurons is not key to achieve odor information segregation. Public Library of Science 2014-10-30 /pmc/articles/PMC4214673/ /pubmed/25356586 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0109716 Text en © 2014 Polese et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Polese, Davide
Martinelli, Eugenio
Marco, Santiago
Di Natale, Corrado
Gutierrez-Galvez, Agustin
Understanding Odor Information Segregation in the Olfactory Bulb by Means of Mitral and Tufted Cells
title Understanding Odor Information Segregation in the Olfactory Bulb by Means of Mitral and Tufted Cells
title_full Understanding Odor Information Segregation in the Olfactory Bulb by Means of Mitral and Tufted Cells
title_fullStr Understanding Odor Information Segregation in the Olfactory Bulb by Means of Mitral and Tufted Cells
title_full_unstemmed Understanding Odor Information Segregation in the Olfactory Bulb by Means of Mitral and Tufted Cells
title_short Understanding Odor Information Segregation in the Olfactory Bulb by Means of Mitral and Tufted Cells
title_sort understanding odor information segregation in the olfactory bulb by means of mitral and tufted cells
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4214673/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25356586
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0109716
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