Author:
Dunn Raymond L.,Costello Caitriona,Borchardt Jackson M.,Sprague Daniel Y.,Chiu Grace C.,Miller Julia M.,L’Etoile Noelle,Kato Saul
Abstract
AbstractWe report the existence of a working memory system in the nematodeC. elegansthat is employed for deferred action in a sensory-guided decision-making process. We find that the turn direction of discrete reorientations during navigation is under sensory-guided control and relies on a working memory that can persist over an intervening behavioral sequence. This memory system is implemented by the phasic interaction of two distributed oscillatory dynamical components. The interaction of oscillatory neural ensembles may be a conserved primitive of cognition across the animal kingdom.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory