Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS March Meeting 2022
Volume 67, Number 3
Monday–Friday, March 14–18, 2022; Chicago
Session F14: Sensing Chemical Spaces
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Tuesday, March 15, 2022
Room: McCormick Place W-183B
Sponsoring
Unit:
DBIO
Chair: Ned Wingreen, Princeton University
Abstract: F14.00001 : Odor motion detection by an olfactory system aids navigation of complex odor plumes.*
8:00 AM–8:36 AM
Presenter:
Thierry Emonet
(Yale University)
Authors:
Nirag Kadakia
(Yale University)
Mahmut Demir
(Yale University)
Brenden T Michaelis
(University of Virginia)
Matthew A Reidenbach
(University of Virginia)
Damon A Clark
(Yale University)
Thierry Emonet
(Yale University)
We discovered that besides detecting the identity and intensity of odor packets, the Drosophila olfactory system also detects the direction of motion of odor packets. Simulations and theory show that odor motion provides a secondary directional cue, which points towards the center of the odor plume and therefore is complementary to the wind direction. Using a virtual reality setup to decouple wind from odor signal, we find that flies detect odor motion from the temporal correlations of the odor signal between its two antennae, in a computation similar to motion detection in vision. Manipulating spatio-temporal correlations in the virtual odor signal demonstrates that flies indeed exploit odor motion when navigating odor plumes. Thus, Drosophila can compute the direction of motion of odors independent of the wind, and they use this capability in natural plume navigation. This work suggests a novel role for previously observed bilateral signal processing in the olfactory circuit.
*Funding: Swartz Foundation for Theoretical Neuroscience, NIH F32MH118700, and K99DC019397 (NK), Yale PEB program (MD), by NIH R01GM106189 and R01GM138533 (TE), by NSF IIS-1631864 (BM and MR), and by NIH R01EY026555 and R01NS121773 (DAC).
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