Frontiers in Neurology (May 2024)

Learning capabilities to resolve tilt-translation ambiguity in goldfish

  • Shin Tadokoro,
  • Shin Tadokoro,
  • Shin Tadokoro,
  • Yusuke Shinji,
  • Toshimi Yamanaka,
  • Yutaka Hirata,
  • Yutaka Hirata,
  • Yutaka Hirata

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2024.1304496
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15

Abstract

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IntroductionSpatial orientation refers to the perception of relative location and self-motion in space. The accurate formation of spatial orientation is essential for animals to survive and interact safely with their environment. The formation of spatial orientation involves the integration of sensory inputs from the vestibular, visual, and proprioceptive systems. Vestibular organs function as specialized head motion sensors, providing information regarding angular velocity and linear acceleration via the semicircular canals and otoliths, respectively. However, because forces arising from the linear acceleration (translation) and inclination relative to the gravitational axis (tilt) are equivalent, they are indistinguishable by accelerometers, including otoliths. This is commonly referred to as the tilt - translation ambiguity, which can occasionally lead to the misinterpretation of translation as a tilt. The major theoretical frameworks addressing this issue have proposed that the interpretation of tilt versus translation may be contingent on an animal’s previous experiences of motion. However, empirical confirmation of this hypothesis is lacking.MethodsIn this study, we conducted a behavioral experiment using goldfish to investigate how an animal’s motion experience influences its interpretation of tilt vs. translation. We examined a reflexive eye movement called the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR), which compensatory-rotates the eyes in response to head motion and is known to reflect an animal’s three-dimensional head motion estimate.ResultsWe demonstrated that the VORs of naïve goldfish do not differentiate between translation and tilt at 0.5 Hz. However, following prolonged visual-translation training, which provided appropriate visual stimulation in conjunction with translational head motion, the VORs were capable of distinguishing between the two types of head motion within 3 h. These results were replicated using the Kalman filter model of spatial orientation, which incorporated the variable variance of process noise corresponding to the accumulated motion experience.DiscussionBased on these experimental and computational findings, we discuss the neural mechanism underlying the resolution of tilt-translation ambiguity within a context analogous to, yet distinct from, previous cross-axis VOR adaptations.

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