Diverse Representations of Olfactory Information in Centrifugal Feedback Projections.
Krishnan PadmanabhanFumitaka OsakadaAnna TarabrinaErin KizerEdward M CallawayFred H GageTerrence J SejnowskiPublished in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2017)
Principles of anatomical organization, sometimes instantiated as "maps" in the mammalian brain, have provided key insights into the structure and function of circuits in sensory systems. Generally, these characterizations focus on projections from early sensory processing areas to higher processing structures despite considerable evidence that feedback or centrifugal projections often constitute major conduits of information flow. Our results identify structure in the organization of centrifugal feedback projections to the olfactory bulb that is fundamentally different from the organization of feedforward circuits. Our study suggests that understanding computations performed in the olfactory bulb, and more generally in the olfactory system, requires understanding interactions between feedforward and feedback "maps" both structurally and functionally.