Abstract

Animals modulate sensory processing in concert with motor actions. Parallel copies of motor signals, called corollary discharge (CD), prepare the nervous system to process the mixture of externally and self-generated (reafferent) feedback that arises during locomotion. Commonly, CD in the peripheral nervous system cancels reafference to protect sensors and the central nervous system from being fatigued and overwhelmed by self-generated feedback. However, cancellation also limits the feedback that contributes to an animal's awareness of its body position and motion within the environment, the sense of proprioception. We propose that, rather than cancellation, CD to the fish lateral line organ restructures reafference to maximize proprioceptive information content. Fishes' undulatory body motions induce reafferent feedback that can encode the body's instantaneous configuration with respect to fluid flows. We combined experimental and computational analyses of swimming biomechanics and hair cell physiology to develop a neuromechanical model of how fish can track peak body curvature, a key signature of axial undulatory locomotion. Without CD, this computation would be challenged by sensory adaptation, typified by decaying sensitivity and phase distortions with respect to an input stimulus. We find that CD interacts synergistically with sensor polarization to sharpen sensitivity along sensors' preferred axes. The sharpening of sensitivity regulates spiking to a narrow interval coinciding with peak reafferent stimulation, which prevents adaptation and homogenizes the otherwise variable sensor output. Our integrative model reveals a vital role of CD for ensuring precise proprioceptive feedback during undulatory locomotion, which we term external proprioception.

Highlights

  • Maneuvering through the environment requires an awareness of the body and its movements, a sense called proprioception

  • We provide a multiscale neuromechanical model that elucidates how corollary discharge (CD) can mediate the proprioceptive information content of lateral line feedback during axial undulation

  • In our neuromechanical model (Fig 2), deflection of the neuromast cupula is coupled to the progression of the mechanical body wave

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Summary

Introduction

Maneuvering through the environment requires an awareness of the body and its movements, a sense called proprioception. Proprioception enables smooth actions like reaching and grasping for a doorknob in the dark or rapid righting responses to perturbing effects like walking on an unstable surface [1]. Proprioceptive feedback is not a readout of body and limb positions and angles but a dynamic sense that depends on motor context. The gain of type 1a (muscle spindle) afferent fibers is modulated according to gait cycle.

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