Cell Reports (Aug 2019)

Complex Economic Behavior Patterns Are Constructed from Finite, Genetically Controlled Modules of Behavior

  • Cornelia N. Stacher Hörndli,
  • Eleanor Wong,
  • Elliott Ferris,
  • Kathleen Bennett,
  • Susan Steinwand,
  • Alexis Nikole Rhodes,
  • P. Thomas Fletcher,
  • Christopher Gregg

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28, no. 7
pp. 1814 – 1829.e6

Abstract

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Summary: Complex ethological behaviors could be constructed from finite modules that are reproducible functional units of behavior. Here, we test this idea for foraging and develop methods to dissect rich behavior patterns in mice. We uncover discrete modules of foraging behavior reproducible across different strains and ages, as well as nonmodular behavioral sequences. Modules differ in terms of form, expression frequency, and expression timing and are expressed in a probabilistically determined order. Modules shape economic patterns of feeding, exposure, activity, and perseveration responses. The modular architecture of foraging changes developmentally, and different developmental, genetic, and parental effects are found to shape the expression of specific modules. Dissecting modules from complex patterns is powerful for phenotype analysis. We discover that both parental alleles of the imprinted Prader-Willi syndrome gene Magel2 are functional in mice but regulate different modules. Our study found that complex economic patterns are built from finite, genetically controlled modules. : The principles and mechanisms involved in constructing complex behavior patterns are not well defined. Stacher Hörndli et al. find that complex foraging patterns in mice are constructed from finite modules, defined as significantly reproducible behavioral sequences. Modules are expressed in a probabilistically defined order to construct complex patterns and controlled by genetic mechanisms. Keywords: machine learning, behavior, foraging, neuroeconomics, genomic imprinting, Prader-Willi syndrome, epigenetics, neuroscience