Variance Adaptation in Navigational Decision Making
ORAL
Abstract
Sensory systems relay information about the world to the brain, which enacts behaviors through motor outputs. To maximize information transmission, sensory systems discard redundant information through adaptation to the statistics of the environment. The behavioral consequences of sensory adaptation to environmental variance have been largely unexplored. We study how larval Drosophila adapt sensory-motor computations underlying navigation to changes in the variance of visual and olfactory inputs. We show that variance adaptation can be characterized by rescaling of the sensory input and that for both visual and olfactory inputs, the temporal dynamics of adaptation are consistent with optimal variance estimation. In multisensory contexts, larvae adapt independently to variance in each sense, and portions of the navigational pathway encoding mixed odor and light signals are also capable of variance adaptation. Our results suggest multiplication as a mechanism for odor-light integration.
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Presenters
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Jason Wolk
New York University
Authors
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Jason Wolk
New York University
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Ruben Gepner
New York University
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Digvijay S Wadekar
New York University
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Sophie Dvali
New York University
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Marc H Gershow
New York University, Department of Physics, New York University