Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience (Feb 2022)

The Neural Signature of Visual Learning Under Restrictive Virtual-Reality Conditions

  • Gregory Lafon,
  • Haiyang Geng,
  • Haiyang Geng,
  • Aurore Avarguès-Weber,
  • Alexis Buatois,
  • Isabelle Massou,
  • Martin Giurfa,
  • Martin Giurfa,
  • Martin Giurfa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnbeh.2022.846076
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16

Abstract

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Honey bees are reputed for their remarkable visual learning and navigation capabilities. These capacities can be studied in virtual reality (VR) environments, which allow studying performances of tethered animals in stationary flight or walk under full control of the sensory environment. Here, we used a 2D VR setup in which a tethered bee walking stationary under restrictive closed-loop conditions learned to discriminate vertical rectangles differing in color and reinforcing outcome. Closed-loop conditions restricted stimulus control to lateral displacements. Consistently with prior VR analyses, bees learned to discriminate the trained stimuli. Ex vivo analyses on the brains of learners and non-learners showed that successful learning led to a downregulation of three immediate early genes in the main regions of the visual circuit, the optic lobes (OLs) and the calyces of the mushroom bodies (MBs). While Egr1 was downregulated in the OLs, Hr38 and kakusei were coincidently downregulated in the calyces of the MBs. Our work thus reveals that color discrimination learning induced a neural signature distributed along the sequential pathway of color processing that is consistent with an inhibitory trace. This trace may relate to the motor patterns required to solve the discrimination task, which are different from those underlying pathfinding in 3D VR scenarios allowing for navigation and exploratory learning and which lead to IEG upregulation.

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