Information flow through a model of the C. elegans klinotaxis circuit
Eduardo J. Izquierdo, Paul L. Williams, Randall D. Beer

TL;DR
This study analyzes how information about salt concentration changes flows through the neural circuit of C. elegans during klinotaxis, revealing key principles and making testable predictions about neural function.
Contribution
It applies a novel information flow framework to a biologically grounded model of C. elegans klinotaxis, uncovering fundamental circuit principles and state-dependent mechanisms.
Findings
AIY interneuron integrates concentration change information.
Gap junctions facilitate information symmetry in AIZ.
SMB motor neurons gate information based on circuit state.
Abstract
Understanding how information about external stimuli is transformed into behavior is one of the central goals of neuroscience. Here we characterize the information flow through a complete sensorimotor circuit: from stimulus, to sensory neurons, to interneurons, to motor neurons, to muscles, to motion. Specifically, we apply a recently developed framework for quantifying information flow to a previously published ensemble of models of salt klinotaxis in the nematode worm C. elegans. The models are grounded in the neuroanatomy and currently known neurophysiology of the worm. The unknown model parameters were optimized to reproduce the worm's behavior. Information flow analysis reveals several key principles underlying how the models operate: (1) Interneuron class AIY is responsible for integrating information about positive and negative changes in concentration, and exhibits a strong…
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