Impact of precisely-timed inhibition of gustatory cortex on taste behavior depends on single-trial ensemble dynamics.
Narendra MukherjeeJoseph WachutkaDonald B KatzPublished in: eLife (2019)
Sensation and action are necessarily coupled during stimulus perception - while tasting, for instance, perception happens while an animal decides to expel or swallow the substance in the mouth (the former via a behavior known as 'gaping'). Taste responses in the rodent gustatory cortex (GC) span this sensorimotor divide, progressing through firing-rate epochs that culminate in the emergence of action-related firing. Population analyses reveal this emergence to be a sudden, coherent and variably-timed ensemble transition that reliably precedes gaping onset by 0.2-0.3s. Here, we tested whether this transition drives gaping, by delivering 0.5s GC perturbations in tasting trials. Perturbations significantly delayed gaping, but only when they preceded the action-related transition - thus, the same perturbation impacted behavior or not, depending on the transition latency in that particular trial. Our results suggest a distributed attractor network model of taste processing, and a dynamical role for cortex in driving motor behavior.
Keyphrases
- functional connectivity
- clinical trial
- study protocol
- phase iii
- phase ii
- randomized controlled trial
- neural network
- convolutional neural network
- gas chromatography
- single cell
- gene expression
- mass spectrometry
- open label
- genome wide
- machine learning
- density functional theory
- high resolution
- deep learning
- molecular dynamics
- simultaneous determination