Information-theoretic analysis of realistic odor plumes: What cues are useful for determining location?

Many species rely on olfaction to navigate towards food sources or mates. Olfactory navigation is a challenging task since odor environments are typically turbulent. While time-averaged odor concentration varies smoothly with the distance to the source, instaneous concentrations are intermittent and...

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Main Authors: Sebastian D Boie, Erin G Connor, Margaret McHugh, Katherine I Nagel, G Bard Ermentrout, John P Crimaldi, Jonathan D Victor
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-07-01
Series:PLoS Computational Biology
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6054425?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-87e6901744934201afc090b654d13e1d2020-11-25T01:13:29ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Computational Biology1553-734X1553-73582018-07-01147e100627510.1371/journal.pcbi.1006275Information-theoretic analysis of realistic odor plumes: What cues are useful for determining location?Sebastian D BoieErin G ConnorMargaret McHughKatherine I NagelG Bard ErmentroutJohn P CrimaldiJonathan D VictorMany species rely on olfaction to navigate towards food sources or mates. Olfactory navigation is a challenging task since odor environments are typically turbulent. While time-averaged odor concentration varies smoothly with the distance to the source, instaneous concentrations are intermittent and obtaining stable averages takes longer than the typical intervals between animals' navigation decisions. How to effectively sample from the odor distribution to determine sampling location is the focus in this article. To investigate which sampling strategies are most informative about the location of an odor source, we recorded three naturalistic stimuli with planar lased-induced fluorescence and used an information-theoretic approach to quantify the information that different sampling strategies provide about sampling location. Specifically, we compared multiple sampling strategies based on a fixed number of coding bits for encoding the olfactory stimulus. When the coding bits were all allocated to representing odor concentration at a single sensor, information rapidly saturated. Using the same number of coding bits in two sensors provides more information, as does coding multiple samples at different times. When accumulating multiple samples at a fixed location, the temporal sequence does not yield a large amount of information and can be averaged with minimal loss. Furthermore, we show that histogram-equalization is not the most efficient way to use coding bits when using the olfactory sample to determine location.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6054425?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sebastian D Boie
Erin G Connor
Margaret McHugh
Katherine I Nagel
G Bard Ermentrout
John P Crimaldi
Jonathan D Victor
spellingShingle Sebastian D Boie
Erin G Connor
Margaret McHugh
Katherine I Nagel
G Bard Ermentrout
John P Crimaldi
Jonathan D Victor
Information-theoretic analysis of realistic odor plumes: What cues are useful for determining location?
PLoS Computational Biology
author_facet Sebastian D Boie
Erin G Connor
Margaret McHugh
Katherine I Nagel
G Bard Ermentrout
John P Crimaldi
Jonathan D Victor
author_sort Sebastian D Boie
title Information-theoretic analysis of realistic odor plumes: What cues are useful for determining location?
title_short Information-theoretic analysis of realistic odor plumes: What cues are useful for determining location?
title_full Information-theoretic analysis of realistic odor plumes: What cues are useful for determining location?
title_fullStr Information-theoretic analysis of realistic odor plumes: What cues are useful for determining location?
title_full_unstemmed Information-theoretic analysis of realistic odor plumes: What cues are useful for determining location?
title_sort information-theoretic analysis of realistic odor plumes: what cues are useful for determining location?
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Computational Biology
issn 1553-734X
1553-7358
publishDate 2018-07-01
description Many species rely on olfaction to navigate towards food sources or mates. Olfactory navigation is a challenging task since odor environments are typically turbulent. While time-averaged odor concentration varies smoothly with the distance to the source, instaneous concentrations are intermittent and obtaining stable averages takes longer than the typical intervals between animals' navigation decisions. How to effectively sample from the odor distribution to determine sampling location is the focus in this article. To investigate which sampling strategies are most informative about the location of an odor source, we recorded three naturalistic stimuli with planar lased-induced fluorescence and used an information-theoretic approach to quantify the information that different sampling strategies provide about sampling location. Specifically, we compared multiple sampling strategies based on a fixed number of coding bits for encoding the olfactory stimulus. When the coding bits were all allocated to representing odor concentration at a single sensor, information rapidly saturated. Using the same number of coding bits in two sensors provides more information, as does coding multiple samples at different times. When accumulating multiple samples at a fixed location, the temporal sequence does not yield a large amount of information and can be averaged with minimal loss. Furthermore, we show that histogram-equalization is not the most efficient way to use coding bits when using the olfactory sample to determine location.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6054425?pdf=render
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