Back home   |   Bookmark   |   Start page   |   Site map    
Services
News
Channels
Home & Family
Leisure
Technology
Business
Science
Site Search
Free email




'Grasshopper love song give insight into sensory tuning

TheallIneed.com/NC&T/Cell
Neuronal circuitry consists of a web of neurons, each triggering others by launching bursts of neurotransmitters at targets on receiving neurons to produce nerve impulses in those targets. Neurons adjust the strength of those connections adaptively, to amplify or suppress connections. Some four decades ago, a general principle called the "efficient coding hypothesis" was formulated, holding that sensory systems adjust to efficiently represent the complex, dynamic sounds, sights, and other sensory input from the environment.

Writing in the August 4, 2005, issue of Neuron, researchers led by Christian K. Machens of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory and Andreas Herz of Humboldt-University Berlin describe experiments with grasshopper auditory neurons that reveal new details of such sensory coding. Their findings show that "optimal stimulus ensembles" that trigger the neurons differ from those the grasshopper hears in the natural environment but largely overlap with components of natural sounds found in mating and mate-location calls.

In their experiments, the researchers first played various snippets of white noise to isolated grasshopper auditory nerves and measured the electrophysiological signals reflecting the reactions of the auditory neurons to those sounds. These experiments revealed the distribution of stimuli called the "optimal stimulus ensemble" (OSE) that allowed the neurons in the system to perform optimally.

Once the researchers had characterized the OSE, they then analyzed how this measure compared to the neuronal response to natural sounds--including environmental sounds like the rustling of grass and insect communication signals such as grasshopper or cricket mating calls.

They found that the OSEs of the receptors particularly matched characteristic features of species-specific acoustic communication signals used by grasshoppers to attract mating partners.

"Hence, instead of maximizing the average information gained about natural stimuli, the receptors appear to maximize the information gained about specific, but less often occurring aspects of the stimuli," concluded the researchers. "This result suggests that an organism may seek to distribute its sensory resources according to the behavioral relevance of the natural important stimuli, rather than according to purely statistical principles.

"For instance, if a few important stimuli within the natural environment need to be encoded with high precision, a large part of a system's coding capacity could be designated to encode these stimuli. Consequently, it may well be that even small subensembles strongly influence the coding strategy of sensory neurons. In this case, the optimal stimulus ensemble will not match the ensemble of all natural stimuli encountered by the particular species."

The researchers also concluded that "We therefore suggest that the coding strategy of sensory neurons is not matched to the statistics of natural stimuli per se, but rather to a weighted ensemble of natural stimuli, where the different behavioral relevance of stimuli determines their relative weight in the ensemble."

Machens, Herz, and their colleagues also concluded that their analytical technique could yield broader insight into the evolution of sensory circuitry.

"Our approach presents a systematic way to uncover potential mismatches between the statistical properties of the natural environment and the coding strategy of sensory neurons. In turn, these discrepancies might improve our understanding of the evolutionary design of the specific sensory system," they wrote.

About the Author
©2005 All rights reserved

  Click here to see related videos
More articles
Sickness guidelines
Proteome of human cornea
How cancer spreads
Vanadium infections
Immune therapy
Neurons stimulation
Ambiguities when speaking
Cosmic radiation risks
Heart diseases prevention
Effects of video gaming
Epilepsy treatment
Skin cancer investigation
Music sensibility in babies
Diseases prevention
Sensorial perceptions
Stem cell research
Tuberculosis research and treatment
Eating behavior
Brain chemistry mechanisms
Quotes
Good Night, Good night! Parting is such sweet sorrow, that I shall say good night till it be morrow.-William Shakespeare

Giving is the highest expression of our power. - Vivian Greene

Go down to the machine room and tell them to empty the bit bucket,and FAST, before this baby overflows. -- Adrian Colley


Writers
If you are a writer and want to see your article published at Theallineed.com, just click here to submit.

Info
Today...
In the news...
Schedules for the Beijing 2008 Olympic Basketball Tournaments Announced
Already qualified for Beijing 2008 are: Australia (World Champion), China (host), Korea (Asian Champion), Mali (African Champion), New Zealand (Oceanian runner-up), Russia (European Champion) and USA (Champion of the Americas).
How often do you go to fast food restaurants?
Never
Once a month
Once a week
Some times a week
Every day
Other
 
Things to ponder
What do you do when you see an endangered animal eating an endangered plant?

Did you know...
In tennis, zero points is referred to as love, which is possibly derived from the French word for egg, l'oeuf, referring to the physical appearance of the number zero.

Quote of the day
People find life entirely too time-consuming.
Stanislaw J. Lec

Featured article
Today, digital cameras can be purchased wholesale and through retail outlets. Believe it or not, it is to possible to purchase wholesale digital cameras and still retain many safety as well as security options coupled with...

 
© Lexur