AI Article Synopsis

  • The paper explores how motor activity, like swallowing in Aplysia californica, balances sensory input and internal patterns, challenging the extremes of reflexes and idealized central pattern generators (CPGs).
  • The authors present a model that can switch between two behavior-generating regimes: a limit cycle and a heteroclinic channel, showing that the latter responds better to sensory changes.
  • Findings indicate that the heteroclinic channel model aligns more closely with observed feeding behaviors in Aplysia than simpler limit cycle models, suggesting the latter may overlook important dynamics.

Article Abstract

Many behaviors require reliably generating sequences of motor activity while adapting the activity to incoming sensory information. This process has often been conceptually explained as either fully dependent on sensory input (a chain reflex) or fully independent of sensory input (an idealized central pattern generator, or CPG), although the consensus of the field is that most neural pattern generators lie somewhere between these two extremes. Many mathematical models of neural pattern generators use limit cycles to generate the sequence of behaviors, but other models, such as a heteroclinic channel (an attracting chain of saddle points), have been suggested. To explore the range of intermediate behaviors between CPGs and chain reflexes, in this paper we describe a nominal model of swallowing in Aplysia californica. Depending upon the value of a single parameter, the model can transition from a generic limit cycle regime to a heteroclinic regime (where the trajectory slows as it passes near saddle points). We then study the behavior of the system in these two regimes and compare the behavior of the models with behavior recorded in the animal in vivo and in vitro. We show that while both pattern generators can generate similar behavior, the stable heteroclinic channel can better respond to changes in sensory input induced by load, and that the response matches the changes seen when a load is added in vivo. We then show that the underlying stable heteroclinic channel architecture exhibits dramatic slowing of activity when sensory and endogenous input is reduced, and show that similar slowing with removal of proprioception is seen in vitro. Finally, we show that the distributions of burst lengths seen in vivo are better matched by the distribution expected from a system operating in the heteroclinic regime than that expected from a generic limit cycle. These observations suggest that generic limit cycle models may fail to capture key aspects of Aplysia feeding behavior, and that alternative architectures such as heteroclinic channels may provide better descriptions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4544651PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10827-014-0519-3DOI Listing

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