The Impact of Ecological Niche on Adaptive Flexibility of Sensory Circuitry

Evolution and development are interdependent, particularly with regard to the construction of the nervous system and its position as the machine that produces behavior. On the one hand, the processes directing development and plasticity of the brain provide avenues through which natural selection ca...

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Main Author: Sarah L. Pallas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2017-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnins.2017.00344/full
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spelling doaj-df372342309e42d38bd2d29430cace0d2020-11-25T00:59:43ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Neuroscience1662-453X2017-06-011110.3389/fnins.2017.00344253700The Impact of Ecological Niche on Adaptive Flexibility of Sensory CircuitrySarah L. PallasEvolution and development are interdependent, particularly with regard to the construction of the nervous system and its position as the machine that produces behavior. On the one hand, the processes directing development and plasticity of the brain provide avenues through which natural selection can sculpt neural cell fate and connectivity, and on the other hand, they are themselves subject to selection pressure. For example, mutations that produce heritable perturbations in neuronal birth and death rates, transcription factor expression, or availability of axon guidance factors within sensory pathways can markedly affect the development of form and thus the function of stimulus decoding circuitry. This evolvability of flexible circuits makes them more adaptable to environmental variation. Although there is general agreement on this point, whether the sensitivity of circuits to environmental influence and the mechanisms underlying development and plasticity of sensory pathways are similar across species from different ecological niches has received almost no attention. Neural circuits are generally more sensitive to environmental influences during an early critical period, but not all niches afford the same access to stimuli in early life. Furthermore, depending on predictability of the habitat and ecological niche, sensory coding circuits might be more susceptible to sensory experience in some species than in others. Despite decades of work on understanding the mechanisms underlying critical period plasticity, the importance of ecological niche in visual pathway development has received little attention. Here, I will explore the relationship between critical period plasticity and ecological niche in mammalian sensory pathways.http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnins.2017.00344/fullsensory deprivationcross-modal plasticitytopographic mapssynaptic plasticityinhibitory plasticity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sarah L. Pallas
spellingShingle Sarah L. Pallas
The Impact of Ecological Niche on Adaptive Flexibility of Sensory Circuitry
Frontiers in Neuroscience
sensory deprivation
cross-modal plasticity
topographic maps
synaptic plasticity
inhibitory plasticity
author_facet Sarah L. Pallas
author_sort Sarah L. Pallas
title The Impact of Ecological Niche on Adaptive Flexibility of Sensory Circuitry
title_short The Impact of Ecological Niche on Adaptive Flexibility of Sensory Circuitry
title_full The Impact of Ecological Niche on Adaptive Flexibility of Sensory Circuitry
title_fullStr The Impact of Ecological Niche on Adaptive Flexibility of Sensory Circuitry
title_full_unstemmed The Impact of Ecological Niche on Adaptive Flexibility of Sensory Circuitry
title_sort impact of ecological niche on adaptive flexibility of sensory circuitry
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Neuroscience
issn 1662-453X
publishDate 2017-06-01
description Evolution and development are interdependent, particularly with regard to the construction of the nervous system and its position as the machine that produces behavior. On the one hand, the processes directing development and plasticity of the brain provide avenues through which natural selection can sculpt neural cell fate and connectivity, and on the other hand, they are themselves subject to selection pressure. For example, mutations that produce heritable perturbations in neuronal birth and death rates, transcription factor expression, or availability of axon guidance factors within sensory pathways can markedly affect the development of form and thus the function of stimulus decoding circuitry. This evolvability of flexible circuits makes them more adaptable to environmental variation. Although there is general agreement on this point, whether the sensitivity of circuits to environmental influence and the mechanisms underlying development and plasticity of sensory pathways are similar across species from different ecological niches has received almost no attention. Neural circuits are generally more sensitive to environmental influences during an early critical period, but not all niches afford the same access to stimuli in early life. Furthermore, depending on predictability of the habitat and ecological niche, sensory coding circuits might be more susceptible to sensory experience in some species than in others. Despite decades of work on understanding the mechanisms underlying critical period plasticity, the importance of ecological niche in visual pathway development has received little attention. Here, I will explore the relationship between critical period plasticity and ecological niche in mammalian sensory pathways.
topic sensory deprivation
cross-modal plasticity
topographic maps
synaptic plasticity
inhibitory plasticity
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnins.2017.00344/full
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