The structure and timescales of heat perception in larval zebrafish.

Cell Syst
Authors
Abstract

Avoiding temperatures outside the physiological range is critical for animal survival, but how temperature dynamics are transformed into behavioral output is largely not understood. Here, we used an infrared laser to challenge freely swimming larval zebrafish with "white-noise" heat stimuli and built quantitative models relating external sensory information and internal state to behavioral output. These models revealed that larval zebrafish integrate temperature information over a time-window of 400 ms preceding a swimbout and that swimming is suppressed right after the end of a bout. Our results suggest that larval zebrafish compute both an integral and a derivative across heat in time to guide their next movement. Our models put important constraints on the type of computations that occur in the nervous system and reveal principles of how somatosensory temperature information is processed to guide behavioral decisions such as sensitivity to both absolute levels and changes in stimulation.

Year of Publication
2015
Journal
Cell Syst
Volume
1
Issue
5
Pages
338-348
Date Published
2015 Nov 25
ISSN
2405-4712
DOI
10.1016/j.cels.2015.10.010
PubMed ID
26640823
PubMed Central ID
PMC4669073
Links
Grant list
DP1 NS082121 / NS / NINDS NIH HHS / United States
R01 HL109525 / HL / NHLBI NIH HHS / United States
U01 NS090449 / NS / NINDS NIH HHS / United States