Department of Physics, Department of Biology, University of Miami, Coral Gables, United States.
Department of Biology, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.
Elife. 2023 Oct 19;12:e69205. doi: 10.7554/eLife.69205.
How animals respond to repeatedly applied stimuli, and how animals respond to mechanical stimuli in particular, are important questions in behavioral neuroscience. We study adaptation to repeated mechanical agitation using the larva. Vertical vibration stimuli elicit a discrete set of responses in crawling larvae: continuation, pause, turn, and reversal. Through high-throughput larva tracking, we characterize how the likelihood of each response depends on vibration intensity and on the timing of repeated vibration pulses. By examining transitions between behavioral states at the population and individual levels, we investigate how the animals habituate to the stimulus patterns. We identify time constants associated with desensitization to prolonged vibration, with re-sensitization during removal of a stimulus, and additional layers of habituation that operate in the overall response. Known memory-deficient mutants exhibit distinct behavior profiles and habituation time constants. An analogous simple electrical circuit suggests possible neural and molecular processes behind adaptive behavior.
动物对重复施加的刺激的反应方式,特别是动物对机械刺激的反应方式,是行为神经科学中的重要问题。我们使用幼虫来研究对重复机械搅动的适应。垂直振动刺激会在爬行幼虫中引发一系列离散的反应:继续、暂停、转弯和反转。通过高通量幼虫跟踪,我们描述了每种反应的可能性如何取决于振动强度和重复振动脉冲的时间。通过在群体和个体水平上检查行为状态之间的转换,我们研究了动物如何对刺激模式产生习惯化。我们确定了与长时间振动脱敏、刺激去除期间重新敏感化以及在整体反应中起作用的额外习惯化层相关的时间常数。已知的记忆缺陷突变体表现出不同的行为特征和习惯化时间常数。类似的简单电路表明了适应行为背后可能的神经和分子过程。