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      The "Where" and "Who" in Brain Science: Probing Brain Networks with Local Perturbations

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      Cognitive Computation
      Springer Nature

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          Mechanisms of olfactory discrimination: converging evidence for common principles across phyla.

          Olfaction begins with the transduction of the information carried by odor molecules into electrical signals in sensory neurons. The activation of different subsets of sensory neurons to different degrees is the basis for neural encoding and further processing of the odor information by higher centers in the olfactory pathway. Recent evidence has converged on a set of transduction mechanisms, involving G-protein-coupled second-messenger systems, and neural processing mechanisms, involving modules called glomeruli, that appear to be adapted for the requirements of different species. The evidence is highlighted in this review by focusing on studies in selected vertebrates and in insects and crustaceans among invertebrates. The findings support the hypothesis that olfactory transduction and neural processing in the peripheral olfactory pathway involve basic mechanisms that are universal across most species in most phyla.
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            Lateral presynaptic inhibition mediates gain control in an olfactory circuit.

            Olfactory signals are transduced by a large family of odorant receptor proteins, each of which corresponds to a unique glomerulus in the first olfactory relay of the brain. Crosstalk between glomeruli has been proposed to be important in olfactory processing, but it is not clear how these interactions shape the odour responses of second-order neurons. In the Drosophila antennal lobe (a region analogous to the vertebrate olfactory bulb), we selectively removed most interglomerular input to genetically identified second-order olfactory neurons. Here we show that this broadens the odour tuning of these neurons, implying that interglomerular inhibition dominates over interglomerular excitation. The strength of this inhibitory signal scales with total feedforward input to the entire antennal lobe, and has similar tuning in different glomeruli. A substantial portion of this interglomerular inhibition acts at a presynaptic locus, and our results imply that this is mediated by both ionotropic and metabotropic receptors on the same nerve terminal.
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              An identified neuron mediates the unconditioned stimulus in associative olfactory learning in honeybees.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Cognitive Computation
                Cogn Comput
                Springer Nature
                1866-9956
                1866-9964
                March 2012
                January 2012
                : 4
                : 1
                : 63-70
                Article
                10.1007/s12559-011-9122-3
                5e524b97-b1c4-4957-a0bd-43f415a6693c
                © 2012
                History

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