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1.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 6274, 2024 Jul 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39054324

ABSTRACT

Social recognition is essential for the formation of social structures. Many times, recognition comes with lesser exploration of familiar animals. This lesser exploration has led to the assumption that recognition may be a habituation memory. The underlying memory mechanisms and the thereby acquired cortical representations of familiar mice have remained largely unknown, however. Here, we introduce an approach directly examining the recognition process from volatile body odors among male mice. We show that volatile body odors emitted by mice are sufficient to identify individuals and that more salience is assigned to familiar mice. Familiarity is encoded by reinforced population responses in two olfactory cortex hubs and communicated to other brain regions. The underlying oxytocin-induced plasticity promotes the separation of the cortical representations of familiar from other mice. In summary, neuronal encoding of familiar animals is distinct and utilizes the cortical representational space more broadly, promoting storage of complex social relationships.


Subject(s)
Cognition , Odorants , Oxytocin , Recognition, Psychology , Animals , Oxytocin/pharmacology , Oxytocin/metabolism , Male , Mice , Recognition, Psychology/physiology , Recognition, Psychology/drug effects , Cognition/drug effects , Cognition/physiology , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Olfactory Cortex/physiology , Social Behavior , Neuronal Plasticity/drug effects , Smell/physiology , Smell/drug effects , Memory/drug effects , Memory/physiology , Behavior, Animal/drug effects
3.
Nat Commun ; 13(1): 3305, 2022 06 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35676281

ABSTRACT

Identifying the circuits responsible for cognition and understanding their embedded computations is a challenge for neuroscience. We establish here a hierarchical cross-scale approach, from behavioral modeling and fMRI in task-performing mice to cellular recordings, in order to disentangle local network contributions to olfactory reinforcement learning. At mesoscale, fMRI identifies a functional olfactory-striatal network interacting dynamically with higher-order cortices. While primary olfactory cortices respectively contribute only some value components, the downstream olfactory tubercle of the ventral striatum expresses comprehensively reward prediction, its dynamic updating, and prediction error components. In the tubercle, recordings reveal two underlying neuronal populations with non-redundant reward prediction coding schemes. One population collectively produces stabilized predictions as distributed activity across neurons; in the other, neurons encode value individually and dynamically integrate the recent history of uncertain outcomes. These findings validate a cross-scale approach to mechanistic investigations of higher cognitive functions in rodents.


Subject(s)
Reinforcement, Psychology , Ventral Striatum , Animals , Cerebral Cortex , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Mice , Olfactory Tubercle , Reward , Ventral Striatum/diagnostic imaging
4.
Nat Commun ; 11(1): 3460, 2020 07 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32651365

ABSTRACT

The learning of stimulus-outcome associations allows for predictions about the environment. Ventral striatum and dopaminergic midbrain neurons form a larger network for generating reward prediction signals from sensory cues. Yet, the network plasticity mechanisms to generate predictive signals in these distributed circuits have not been entirely clarified. Also, direct evidence of the underlying interregional assembly formation and information transfer is still missing. Here we show that phasic dopamine is sufficient to reinforce the distinctness of stimulus representations in the ventral striatum even in the absence of reward. Upon such reinforcement, striatal stimulus encoding gives rise to interregional assemblies that drive dopaminergic neurons during stimulus-outcome learning. These assemblies dynamically encode the predicted reward value of conditioned stimuli. Together, our data reveal that ventral striatal and midbrain reward networks form a reinforcing loop to generate reward prediction coding.


Subject(s)
Dopamine/metabolism , Dopaminergic Neurons/drug effects , Dopaminergic Neurons/metabolism , Olfactory Tubercle/drug effects , Animals , Dopamine/pharmacology , Male , Mesencephalon/cytology , Mice , Models, Theoretical , Ventral Striatum/drug effects , Ventral Striatum/metabolism
5.
Neuron ; 90(3): 609-21, 2016 05 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27112498

ABSTRACT

Oxytocin promotes social interactions and recognition of conspecifics that rely on olfaction in most species. The circuit mechanisms through which oxytocin modifies olfactory processing are incompletely understood. Here, we observed that optogenetically induced oxytocin release enhanced olfactory exploration and same-sex recognition of adult rats. Consistent with oxytocin's function in the anterior olfactory cortex, particularly in social cue processing, region-selective receptor deletion impaired social recognition but left odor discrimination and recognition intact outside a social context. Oxytocin transiently increased the drive of the anterior olfactory cortex projecting to olfactory bulb interneurons. Cortical top-down recruitment of interneurons dynamically enhanced the inhibitory input to olfactory bulb projection neurons and increased the signal-to-noise of their output. In summary, oxytocin generates states for optimized information extraction in an early cortical top-down network that is required for social interactions with potential implications for sensory processing deficits in autism spectrum disorders.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Animal/physiology , Nerve Net/physiology , Olfactory Bulb/physiology , Oxytocin/metabolism , Smell/physiology , Social Behavior , Animals , Interneurons/physiology , Mice, Transgenic , Rats, Wistar
7.
Buenos Aires; La Pleyade; 1a ed; 1978. 76 p. ^e20 cm.
Monography in Spanish | LILACS-Express | BINACIS | ID: biblio-1198866
8.
Buenos Aires; La Pleyade; 1a ed; 1978. 76 p. 20 cm. (73779).
Monography in Spanish | BINACIS | ID: bin-73779
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