High Precision of Spike Timing across Olfactory Receptor Neurons Allows Rapid Odor Coding in Drosophila


Date

2018-06-29

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

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Data

Abstract

In recent years, it has become evident that olfaction is a fast sense, and millisecond short differences in stimulus onsets are used by animals to analyze their olfactory environment. In contrast, olfactory receptor neurons are thought to be relatively slow and temporally imprecise. These observations have led to a conundrum: how, then, can an animal resolve fast stimulus dynamics and smell with high temporal acuity? Using parallel recordings from olfactory receptor neurons in Drosophila, we found hitherto unknown fast and temporally precise odorant-evoked spike responses, with first spike latencies (relative to odorant arrival) down to 3 ms and with a SD below 1 ms. These data provide new upper bounds for the speed of olfactory processing and suggest that the insect olfactory system could use the precise spike timing for olfactory coding and computation, which can explain insects' rapid processing of temporal stimuli when encountering turbulent odor plumes.

Publication status

published

Editor

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Journal / series

Volume

4

Pages / Article No.

76 - 83

Publisher

Elsevier

Event

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

Organisational unit

02533 - Institut für Neuroinformatik / Institute of Neuroinformatics

Notes

Supplement is attached to the paper

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