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Studying the origin and role of the electric oscillations in a computational model of vertebrate olfactory system.

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Author(s):
Fábio Marques Simões de Souza
Total Authors: 1
Document type: Doctoral Thesis
Press: Ribeirão Preto.
Institution: Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Faculdade de Filosofia, Ciências e Letras de Ribeirão Preto (PCARP/BC)
Defense date:
Examining board members:
Antonio Carlos Roque da Silva Filho; Norberto Garcia Cairasco; Bettina Malnic; Wagner Ferreira dos Santos; Wamberto Antonio Varanda
Advisor: Antonio Carlos Roque da Silva Filho
Abstract

This work is a study of some mechanisms associated with the generation of electric oscillations in the vertebrate olfactory system. Special attention is given for the role of the respiratory rhythm, chemical synapses and electrical synapses in this process. The possible functions of the electric oscillations in olfactory information processing are explored. A computational model that reproduces aspects of the anatomy and physiology of the olfactory epithelium, bulb and piriform cortex was utilized to realize this investigation. The models were developed and simulated in the GENESIS neurosimulator, running under the LINUX operational system. The analysis of the results was made in the software MATLAB (Mathworks™). In the beginning, the thesis describe the neurobiological substracts of the initial layers of the olfactory system, including the olfactory epithelium, bulb and piriform cortex, and explore how the olfactory information is processed by each layer. The chapter 1 presents the importance of the olfactory sense and the use of computational neuroscience to study the role of the electric oscillations in this system. The chapter 2 explains the material and methods utilized to develop the computational model and to analyse the data generated by the model. The chapter 3 describes the used computational model and the experiments realized with the model. Finally, the chapter 4 presents and discusses the results of the simulations. The chapter 5 extends the discussion and concludes the thesis. The chapter 6 contains the bibliographic references. The results of the work suggest that electric oscillations in the olfactory system could be generated in several structures and organizational levels, including the molecular level, the cellular and neural systems level. In particular, the results shown that chemical and electric synapses, as well as the respiratory rhythm, may have a fundamental role in the generation of these oscillations. Indeed, the constructed model proposes a plausible explanation for the origin of the electrical oscillations in the vertebrate olfactory system and discusses the possible function of these oscillations in the context of sensorial information processing. (AU)