Department of Physics, Princeton University, Princeton, United States.
Princeton Neuroscience Institute, Princeton University, Princeton, United States.
Elife. 2021 Jul 29;10:e66135. doi: 10.7554/eLife.66135.
We investigated the neural representation of locomotion in the nematode by recording population calcium activity during movement. We report that population activity more accurately decodes locomotion than any single neuron. Relevant signals are distributed across neurons with diverse tunings to locomotion. Two largely distinct subpopulations are informative for decoding velocity and curvature, and different neurons' activities contribute features relevant for different aspects of a behavior or different instances of a behavioral motif. To validate our measurements, we labeled neurons AVAL and AVAR and found that their activity exhibited expected transients during backward locomotion. Finally, we compared population activity during movement and immobilization. Immobilization alters the correlation structure of neural activity and its dynamics. Some neurons positively correlated with AVA during movement become negatively correlated during immobilization and vice versa. This work provides needed experimental measurements that inform and constrain ongoing efforts to understand population dynamics underlying locomotion in .
我们通过记录线虫运动过程中的群体钙活动来研究运动的神经表示。我们报告说,群体活动比任何单个神经元都更能准确地解码运动。相关信号分布在对运动具有不同调谐的神经元中。两个主要不同的亚群对解码速度和曲率很有帮助,不同神经元的活动为行为的不同方面或行为模式的不同实例提供了相关特征。为了验证我们的测量结果,我们标记了神经元 AVAL 和 AVAR,并发现它们的活动在向后运动期间表现出预期的瞬变。最后,我们比较了运动和固定状态下的群体活动。固定状态会改变神经活动的相关结构及其动态。在运动过程中与 AVA 呈正相关的一些神经元在固定状态下变得负相关,反之亦然。这项工作提供了必要的实验测量结果,为理解线虫运动背后的群体动力学提供了信息和限制,这些研究正在进行中。