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Research Article

Adaptive Adjustment of the Generalization-Discrimination Balance in Larval Drosophila

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Pages 168-175 | Received 22 Jan 2010, Accepted 31 May 2010, Published online: 31 Aug 2010
 

Abstract

Learnt predictive behavior faces a dilemma: predictive stimuli will never ‘replay’ exactly as during the learning event, requiring generalization. In turn, minute differences can become meaningful, prompting discrimination. To provide a study case for an adaptive adjustment of this generalization-discrimination balance, the authors ask whether Drosophila melanogaster larvae are able to either generalize or discriminate between two odors (1-octen-3-ol and 3-octanol), depending on the task. The authors find that after discriminatively rewarding one but not the other odor, larvae show conditioned preference for the rewarded odor. On the other hand, no odor specificity is observed after nondiscriminative training, even if the test involves a choice between both odors. Thus, for this odor pair at least, discrimination training is required to confer an odor-specific memory trace. This requires that there is at least some difference in processing between the two odors already at the beginning of the training. Therefore, as a default, there is a small yet salient difference in processing between 1-octen-3-ol and 3-octanol; this difference is ignored after nondiscriminative training (generalization), whereas it is accentuated by odor-specific reinforcement (discrimination). Given that, as the authors show, both faculties are lost in anosmic Or83b1 mutants, this indicates an adaptive adjustment of the generalization-discrimination balance in larval Drosophila, taking place downstream of Or83b-expressing sensory neurons.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This paper is dedicated to Erich Buchner in acknowledgement of his role as scientist, mentor, and colleague, and in particular of his group's early discoveries regarding odor processing (CitationRodrigues & Buchner, 1984), which have initiated a long-standing German-Indian scientific collaboration.

Declaration of interest: Support for this study came through grants of the German Federal Ministry of Science and Technology (BMBF) (Bernstein Focus Insect-inspired robotics) and the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) (CRC 554 Arthropode Behavior, PP 1392 Integrative Analyses of Olfaction). B.G. is a Heisenberg Fellow of the DFG. M.L. acknowledges funding from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (MICINN), and the CRG-EMBL Systems Biology Program. L. Vosshall kindly provided the Or83b1

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