黑腹果蝇运动决策的时空动态变化

Lior Lebovich, Tom Alisch, Edward S Redhead, Matthew O Parker, Yonatan Loewenstein, Iain D Couzin, Benjamin L de Bivort
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摘要

动物的决策往往涉及在环境中航行时选择行动,这一过程与实验室环境中通常研究的静态决策范例明显不同。即使在动物可以自由运动的决策实验中,决策结果也往往被解释为发生在空间的单点和时间的单时刻,这种简化可能会掩盖重要的时空动态。我们研究了黑腹果蝇在 Y 形迷宫中的运动决策,测量了通过空间和时间预测其未来选择的程度。我们证明,可以从果蝇的运动动态可靠地预测其转弯决策,随着果蝇穿过迷宫区域,会出现不同的可预测性阶段。我们的研究表明,这些可预测性动态并不仅仅是迷宫几何形状或墙壁追随倾向的结果,而是反映了苍蝇依靠持续运动特征移动的能力,这表明了一种类似于工作记忆的活跃过程。此外,我们还证明,已知存在感官和信息处理缺陷的苍蝇突变体表现出改变的空间可预测性模式,突出了视觉、机械感觉和多巴胺能信号在运动决策中的作用。最后,为了突出我们分析的广泛适用性,我们将研究结果推广到了其他物种和任务中。我们发现,人类参与者在虚拟 Y 型迷宫中表现出与苍蝇相似的决策可预测性动态。这项研究推进了我们对决策过程的理解,强调了运动行为的空间和时间动态在离散选择结果产生之前的重要性。
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Spatiotemporal dynamics of locomotor decisions in Drosophila melanogaster
Decision-making in animals often involves choosing actions while navigating the environment, a process markedly different from static decision paradigms commonly studied in laboratory settings. Even in decision-making assays in which animals can freely locomote, decision outcomes are often interpreted as happening at single points in space and single moments in time, a simplification that potentially glosses over important spatiotemporal dynamics. We investigated locomotor decision-making in Drosophila melanogaster in Y-shaped mazes, measuring the extent to which their future choices could be predicted through space and time. We demonstrate that turn-decisions can be reliably predicted from flies' locomotor dynamics, with distinct predictability phases emerging as flies progress through maze regions. We show that these predictability dynamics are not merely the result of maze geometry or wall-following tendencies, but instead reflect the capacity of flies to move in ways that depend on sustained locomotor signatures, suggesting an active, working memory-like process. Additionally, we demonstrate that fly mutants known to have sensory and information-processing deficits exhibit altered spatial predictability patterns, highlighting the role of visual, mechanosensory, and dopaminergic signaling in locomotor decision-making. Finally, highlighting the broad applicability of our analyses, we generalize our findings to other species and tasks. We show that human participants in a virtual Y-maze exhibited similar decision predictability dynamics as flies. This study advances our understanding of decision-making processes, emphasizing the importance of spatial and temporal dynamics of locomotor behavior in the lead-up to discrete choice outcomes.
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