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| Spatiotemporal representations in the olfactory system Trends in Neurosciences, Volume 30, Issue 3, 1 March 2007, Pages 92-100 Andreas T. Schaefer and Troy W. Margrie Abstract A complete understanding of the mechanisms underlying any kind of sensory, motor or cognitive task requires analysis from the systems to the cellular level. In olfaction, new behavioural evidence in rodents has provided temporal limits on neural processing times that correspond to less than 150ms – the timescale of a single sniff. Recent data from the olfactory bulb indicate that, within each sniff, odour representation is not only spatially organized, but also temporally structured by odour-specific patterns of onset latencies. Thus, we propose that the spatial representation of odour is not a static one, but rather evolves across a sniff, whereby for difficult discriminations of similar odours, it is necessary for the olfactory system to ‘wait’ for later-activated components. Based on such evidence, we have devised a working model to assess further the relevance of such spatiotemporal processes in odour representation. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (1365 kb) |
| Perception: Transient Disruptions to Neural Space–Time Current Biology, Volume 16, Issue 19, 10 October 2006, Pages R847-R849 David Burr and Concetta Morrone Summary How vision operates efficiently in the face of continuous shifts of gaze remains poorly understood. Recent studies show that saccades cause dramatic, but transient, changes in the spatial and also temporal tuning of cells in many visual areas, which may underly the perceptual compression of space and time, and serve to counteract the effects of the saccades and maintain visual stability. Summary | Full Text | PDF (84 kb) |
Copyright © 1980 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 29, Issue 3, 397-411, 1 March 1980
doi:10.1016/S0006-3495(80)85142-3
Research Article
T.V. Getchell, G.L. Heck, J.A. DeSimone and S. Price
Excitatory responses recorded from vertebrate olfactory sensory neurons are characterized by long latencies compared with those from other sensory receptors. Explanations which assume free access of the stimuli to receptor molecules presumably located on the olfactory cilia necessarily imply an intrinsic delay in the transduction mechanism. In contrast, the possibility of restricted or delayed access due to diffusion of the stimulus to molecular receptors located on the dendritic know or proximal portions of the cilia suggests transduction processes having time courses similar to those in other sensory systems. We show that the threshold stimulus concentrations and the latency of the excitatory response of the salamander can be predicted primarily on the basis of a diffusional delay and that the receptor molecules are well below the surface of the mucus. Examination of response latencies for other species reported in the literature support the generality of diffusional delay. The predicted location of molecular receptor sites is largely insensitive to assumptions based on the mode of clearance of the stimuli. Additional access restrictions are discussed but are shown to generate qualitatively different latency functions than does diffusion, suggesting that they exert only minor influences on latency and threshold characteristics.