Sensory encoding and memory in the mushroom body: signals, noise, and variability

Author:

Parnas MosheORCID,Manoim Julia E.,Lin Andrew C.ORCID

Abstract

To survive in changing environments, animals need to learn to associate specific sensory stimuli with positive or negative valence. How do they form stimulus-specific memories to distinguish between positively/negatively associated stimuli and other irrelevant stimuli? Solving this task is one of the functions of the mushroom body, the associative memory center in insect brains. Here we summarize recent work on sensory encoding and memory in theDrosophilamushroom body, highlighting general principles such as pattern separation, sparse coding, noise and variability, coincidence detection, and spatially localized neuromodulation, and placing the mushroom body in comparative perspective with mammalian memory systems.

Funder

Wellcome Trust

Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council

Israel Science Foundation

United States–Israel Binational Science Foundation

European Research Council

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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