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Internal State Dynamics Shape Brainwide Activity and Foraging Behavior

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TLDR
In this article, the authors used tracking microscopy to monitor whole-brain neuronal activity at cellular resolution in freely moving zebrafish larvae during foraging for live prey, revealing an important hidden variable that shapes the temporal structure of motivation and decision-making.
Abstract
The brain has persistent internal states that can modulate every aspect of an animal’s mental experience 1 – 4 . In complex tasks such as foraging, the internal state is dynamic 5 – 8 . Caenorhabditis elegans alternate between local search and global dispersal 5 . Rodents and primates exhibit trade-offs between exploitation and exploration 6 , 7 . However, fundamental questions remain about how persistent states are maintained in the brain, which upstream networks drive state transitions and how state-encoding neurons exert neuromodulatory effects on sensory perception and decision-making to govern appropriate behaviour. Here, using tracking microscopy to monitor whole-brain neuronal activity at cellular resolution in freely moving zebrafish larvae 9 , we show that zebrafish spontaneously alternate between two persistent internal states during foraging for live prey ( Paramecia ). In the exploitation state, the animal inhibits locomotion and promotes hunting, generating small, localized trajectories. In the exploration state, the animal promotes locomotion and suppresses hunting, generating long-ranging trajectories that enhance spatial dispersion. We uncover a dorsal raphe subpopulation with persistent activity that robustly encodes the exploitation state. The exploitation-state-encoding neurons, together with a multimodal trigger network that is associated with state transitions, form a stochastically activated nonlinear dynamical system. The activity of this oscillatory network correlates with a global retuning of sensorimotor transformations during foraging that leads to marked changes in both the motivation to hunt for prey and the accuracy of motor sequences during hunting. This work reveals an important hidden variable that shapes the temporal structure of motivation and decision-making. During foraging for live prey, zebrafish larvae alternate between persistent exploitation and exploration behavioural states that correlate with distinct patterns of neuronal activation.

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Curiosity and the exploration-exploitation dilemma

TL;DR: In this paper, the exploration-exploitation dilemma has been shown to have a tractable solution based on the classic win-stay, lose-switch strategy from game theory.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Intrinsic activity temporal structure reactivity to behavioural state change is correlated with depressive symptoms.

TL;DR: An initial link between intrinsic activity reactivity and psychological features found in psychiatric disorders is provided by measuring intrinsic EEG activity temporal structure in eyes‐closed and eyes‐open task‐free states and contrasting between the conditions.
Book ChapterDOI

Toward a comprehensive model of circuits underlying locomotion: What did we learn from zebrafish?

TL;DR: Research using the larval zebrafish has led to exciting discoveries on the organization of motor circuits linking molecules, cells, dynamics of neuronal networks to active locomotion at the entire organism level while preserving the single-cell resolution.
Posted ContentDOI

Behavioral signatures of a developing neural code

TL;DR: There is a direct link between the maturity of neural coding in the visual brain and developmental changes in visually-guided behavior in zebrafish larvae, showing how the neural codes required to subserve a natural behavior emerge during development.
Posted ContentDOI

Larval zebrafish respond to the alarm pheromone Schreckstoff by immobility and a change in brain state

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that danger cues activate multiple brain circuits in zebrafish resulting in the expression of a continuum of defensive behaviors, some of which extend beyond stimulus detection.
Posted ContentDOI

Neural correlates of state transitions elicited by a chemosensory danger cue

TL;DR: This study highlights the utility of the zebrafish larval alarm response system to examine neural circuits during stress dependent brain state transitions and to discover potential therapeutic agents when such transitions are disrupted.
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