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Internal state dynamics shape brainwide activity and foraging behaviour 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 577 (7789) : 239-+
作者:  Marques, Joao C.;  Li, Meng;  Schaak, Diane;  Robson, Drew N.;  Li, Jennifer M.
收藏  |  浏览/下载:23/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

The brain has persistent internal states that can modulate every aspect of an animal'  s mental experience(1-4). In complex tasks such as foraging, the internal state is dynamic(5-8). Caenorhabditis elegans alternate between local search and global dispersal(5). Rodents and primates exhibit trade-offs between exploitation and exploration(6,7). However, fundamental questions remain about how persistent states are maintained in the brain, which upstream networks drive state transitions and how state-encoding neurons exert neuromodulatory effects on sensory perception and decision-making to govern appropriate behaviour. Here, using tracking microscopy to monitor whole-brain neuronal activity at cellular resolution in freely moving zebrafish larvae(9), we show that zebrafish spontaneously alternate between two persistent internal states during foraging for live prey (Paramecia). In the exploitation state, the animal inhibits locomotion and promotes hunting, generating small, localized trajectories. In the exploration state, the animal promotes locomotion and suppresses hunting, generating long-ranging trajectories that enhance spatial dispersion. We uncover a dorsal raphe subpopulation with persistent activity that robustly encodes the exploitation state. The exploitation-state-encoding neurons, together with a multimodal trigger network that is associated with state transitions, form a stochastically activated nonlinear dynamical system. The activity of this oscillatory network correlates with a global retuning of sensorimotor transformations during foraging that leads to marked changes in both the motivation to hunt for prey and the accuracy of motor sequences during hunting. This work reveals an important hidden variable that shapes the temporal structure of motivation and decision-making.


  
Fundamental bounds on the fidelity of sensory cortical coding 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020
作者:  Rempel, S.;  Gati, C.;  Nijland, M.;  Thangaratnarajah, C.;  Karyolaimos, A.;  de Gier, J. W.;  Guskov, A.;  Slotboom, D. J.
收藏  |  浏览/下载:32/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

How the brain processes information accurately despite stochastic neural activity is a longstanding question(1). For instance, perception is fundamentally limited by the information that the brain can extract from the noisy dynamics of sensory neurons. Seminal experiments(2,3) suggest that correlated noise in sensory cortical neural ensembles is what limits their coding accuracy(4-6), although how correlated noise affects neural codes remains debated(7-11). Recent theoretical work proposes that how a neural ensemble'  s sensory tuning properties relate statistically to its correlated noise patterns is a greater determinant of coding accuracy than is absolute noise strength(12-14). However, without simultaneous recordings from thousands of cortical neurons with shared sensory inputs, it is unknown whether correlated noise limits coding fidelity. Here we present a 16-beam, two-photon microscope to monitor activity across the mouse primary visual cortex, along with analyses to quantify the information conveyed by large neural ensembles. We found that, in the visual cortex, correlated noise constrained signalling for ensembles with 800-1,300 neurons. Several noise components of the ensemble dynamics grew proportionally to the ensemble size and the encoded visual signals, revealing the predicted information-limiting correlations(12-14). Notably, visual signals were perpendicular to the largest noise mode, which therefore did not limit coding fidelity. The information-limiting noise modes were approximately ten times smaller and concordant with mouse visual acuity(15). Therefore, cortical design principles appear to enhance coding accuracy by restricting around 90% of noise fluctuations to modes that do not limit signalling fidelity, whereas much weaker correlated noise modes inherently bound sensory discrimination.


A microscopy system that enables simultaneous recording from hundreds of neurons in the mouse visual cortex reveals that the brain enhances its coding capacity by representing visual inputs in dimensions perpendicular to correlated noise.


  
Climate change and adaptation strategies in Budhi Gandaki River Basin, Nepal: a perception-based analysis 期刊论文
CLIMATIC CHANGE, 2017, 140 (2)
作者:  Devkota, Rohini P.;  Pandey, Vishnu P.;  Bhattarai, Utsav;  Shrestha, Harshana;  Adhikari, Shrijwal;  Dulal, Khada Nanda
收藏  |  浏览/下载:11/0  |  提交时间:2019/04/09
Adaptation  Budhi Gandaki  Climate change  Hydroclimate  People'  s perception