Abstract
Olfaction guides navigation and decision-making in organisms from multiple animal phyla. Understanding how animals use olfactory cues to guide navigation is a complicated problem for two main reasons. First, the sensory cues used to guide animals to the source of an odor consist of volatile molecules, which form plumes. These plumes are governed by turbulent air currents, resulting in an intermittent and spatiotemporally varying olfactory signal. A second problem is that the technologies for chemical quantification are cumbersome and cannot be used to detect what the freely moving animal senses in real time. Understanding how the olfactory system guides this behavior requires knowing the sensory cues and the accompanying brain signals during navigation. Here, we present a method for real-time monitoring of olfactory information using low-cost, lightweight sensors that robustly detect common solvent molecules, like alcohols, and can be easily mounted on the heads of freely behaving mice engaged in odor-guided navigation. To establish the accuracy and temporal response properties of these sensors we compared their responses with those of a photoionization detector (PID) to precisely controlled ethanol stimuli. Ethanol-sensor recordings, deconvolved using a difference-of-exponentials kernel, showed robust correlations with the PID signal at behaviorally relevant time, frequency, and spatial scales. Additionally, calcium imaging of odor responses from the olfactory bulbs (OBs) of awake, head-fixed mice showed strong correlations with ethanol plume contacts detected by these sensors. Finally, freely behaving mice engaged in odor-guided navigation showed robust behavioral changes such as speed reduction that corresponded to ethanol plume contacts.
Highlights
Animals from different phyla within the kingdom use olfactory cues to guide navigation and decision-making to find resources essential to survival
Modeling the ethanol response as a difference of two exponentials (Monroy et al, 2012); we deconvolved individual ethanol-sensor recordings using a family of kernels with a range of tau rise and tau decay values. These deconvolved signals were compared with the photoionization detector (PID) recordings, taken as the ground truth
The PID response is shown in red
Summary
Animals from different phyla within the kingdom use olfactory cues to guide navigation and decision-making to find resources essential to survival. This task of locating resources using olfaction is a complex problem because of the nature of the olfactory stimulus. Time-averaged concentrations of the odorant in space are a poor measure of the olfactory information that a freely moving searcher, using odors to find the source, will experience (Baker et al, 2018) Measuring this odor input in real time, as sensed by the searcher, is essential to understanding how the nervous system processes olfactory information during complex free behavior such as plume tracking
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