Sensory Memory for Odors Is Encoded in Spontaneous Correlated Activity Between Olfactory Glomeruli

  • Authors:
  • Roberto F. Galán;Marcel F. Weidert;Randolf F. Menzel;Andreas V. M. Herz;C. Giovanni V. M. Galizia

  • Affiliations:
  • Institute for Theoretical Biology, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, 10115 Berlin, Germany, and Department of Biological Sciences and Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition, Mellon Institute, ...;Institute for Neurobiology, Freie Universität Berlin, 14195 Berlin, Germany;Institute for Neurobiology, Freie Universität Berlin, 14195 Berlin, Germany;Institute for Theoretical Biology, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, 10115 Berlin, Germany;Department of Entomology, University of California, Riverside, CA 92521, U.S.A.

  • Venue:
  • Neural Computation
  • Year:
  • 2006

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Abstract

Sensory memory is a short-lived persistence of a sensory stimulus in the nervous system, such as iconic memory in the visual system. However, little is known about the mechanisms underlying olfactory sensory memory. We have therefore analyzed the effect of odor stimuli on the first odor-processing network in the honeybee brain, the antennal lobe, which corresponds to the vertebrate olfactory bulb. We stained output neurons with a calcium-sensitive dye and measured across-glomerular patterns of spontaneous activity before and after a stimulus. Such a single-odor presentation changed the relative timing of spontaneous activity across glomeruli in accordance with Hebb's theory of learning. Moreover, during the first few minutes after odor presentation, correlations between the spontaneous activity fluctuations suffice to reconstruct the stimulus. As spontaneous activity is ubiquitous in the brain, modifiable fluctuations could provide an ideal substrate for Hebbian reverberations and sensory memory in other neural systems.