Advanced search×

A large-scale model of the locust antennal lobe.

J Comput Neurosci 27(3):553-67 (2009) PMID 19548077

The antennal lobe (AL) is the primary structure within the locust's brain that receives information from olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs) within the antennae. Different odors activate distinct subsets of ORNs, implying that neuronal signals at the level of the antennae encode odors combinatorially. Within the AL, however, different odors produce signals with long-lasting dynamic transients carried by overlapping neural ensembles, suggesting a more complex coding scheme. In this work we use a large-scale point neuron model of the locust AL to investigate this shift in stimulus encoding and potential consequences for odor discrimination. Consistent with experiment, our model produces stimulus-sensitive, dynamically evolving populations of active AL neurons. Our model relies critically on the persistence time-scale associated with ORN input to the AL, sparse connectivity among projection neurons, and a synaptic slow inhibitory mechanism. Collectively, these architectural features can generate network odor representations of considerably higher dimension than would be generated by a direct feed-forward representation of stimulus space.

DOI: 10.1007/s10827-009-0169-z
Version: za2963e q8za8 q8zbe q8zcd q8zd6 q8ze6 q8zff q8zgd

Similar articles you may find interesting…

  1. Dual oscillator model of the respiratory neuronal network generating quantal slowing of respiratory rhythm

    J Comput Neurosci 30(2):225-240 (2011) PMID 20544264

    We developed a dual oscillator model to facilitate the understanding of dynamic interactions between the parafacial respiratory group (pFRG) and the preBötzinger complex (preBötC) neurons in the respiratory rhythm generation. Both neuronal groups were modeled as groups of 81 interconnected pacemak...
  2. Thermodynamic constraints on neural dimensions, firing rates, brain temperature and size.

    J Comput Neurosci 27(3):415-36 (2009) PMID 19415477

    There have been suggestions that heat caused by cerebral metabolic activity may constrain mammalian brain evolution, architecture, and function. This article investigates physical limits on brain wiring and corresponding changes in brain temperature that are imposed by thermodynamics of heat balance...
  3. Coarse-grained event tree analysis for quantifying Hodgkin-Huxley neuronal network dynamics.

    J Comput Neurosci 32(1):55-72 (2012) PMID 21597895

    We present an event tree analysis of studying the dynamics of the Hodgkin-Huxley (HH) neuronal networks. Our study relies on a coarse-grained projection to event trees and to the event chains that comprise these trees by using a statistical collection of spatial-temporal sequences of relevant physio...