Continuous spatial representations in the olfactory bulb may reflect perceptual categories

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Abstract

In sensory processing of odors, the olfactory bulb is an important relay station, where odor representations are noise-filtered, sharpened, and possibly re-organized. An organization by perceptual qualities has been found previously in the piri form cortex, however several recent studies indicate that the olfactory bulb code reflects behaviorally relevant dimensions spatially as well as at the population level. We apply a statistical analysis on 2-deoxyglucose images, taken over the entire bulb of glomerular layer of the rat, in order to see how the recognition of odors in the nose is translated into a map of odor quality in the brain. We first confirm previous studies that the first principal component could be related to pleasantness, however the next higher principal components are not directly clear. We then find mostly continuous spatial representations for perceptual categories. We compare the space spanned by spatial and population codes to human reports of perceptual similarity between odors and our results suggest that perceptual categories could be already embedded in glomerular activations and that spatial representations give a better match than population codes. This suggests that human and rat perceptual dimensions of odorant coding are related and indicates that perceptual qualities could be represented as continuous spatial codes of the olfactory bulb glomerulus population. © 2011 Auffarth, Gutierrez-Galvez and Marco.

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Auffarth, B., Gutierrez-Galvez, A., & Marco, S. (2011). Continuous spatial representations in the olfactory bulb may reflect perceptual categories. Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience, (OCTOBER 2011). https://doi.org/10.3389/fnsys.2011.00082

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