Neural Basis of Number Sense in Larval Zebrafish.
Peter LuuAnna NadtochiyMirko ZanonNoah MorenoAndrea MessinaMaria Elena Miletto PetrazziniJose Vicente Torres PerezKevin Keomanee-DizonMatthew JonesCaroline H BrennanGiorgio VallortigaraScott E FraserGiorgio VallortigaraPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Number sense, the ability to discriminate the quantity of objects, is crucial for survival. To understand how neurons work together and develop to mediate number sense, we used two-photon fluorescence light sheet microscopy to capture the activity of individual neurons throughout the brain of larval Danio rerio , while displaying a visual number stimulus to the animal. We identified number-selective neurons as early as 3 days post-fertilization and found a proportional increase of neurons tuned to larger quantities after 3 days. We used machine learning to predict the stimulus from the neuronal activity and observed that the prediction accuracy improves with age. We further tested ethanol's effect on number sense and found a decrease in number-selective neurons in the forebrain, suggesting cognitive impairment. These findings are a significant step towards understanding neural circuits devoted to discrete magnitudes and our methodology to track single-neuron activity across the whole brain is broadly applicable to other fields in neuroscience.