A stochastic explanation for observed local-to-global foraging states in Caenorhabditis elegans
Abrupt changes in behavior can often be associated with changes in underlying behavioral states. When placed off food, the foraging behavior of C. elegans can be described as a change between an initial local-search behavior characterized by a high rate of reorientations, followed by a global-search...
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Veröffentlicht in: | ArXiv.org 2023-09 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Abrupt changes in behavior can often be associated with changes in underlying
behavioral states. When placed off food, the foraging behavior of C. elegans
can be described as a change between an initial local-search behavior
characterized by a high rate of reorientations, followed by a global-search
behavior characterized by sparse reorientations. This is commonly observed in
individual worms, but when numerous worms are characterized, only about half
appear to exhibit this behavior. We propose an alternative model that predicts
both abrupt and continuous changes to reorientation that does not rely on
behavioral states. This model is inspired by molecular dynamics modeling that
defines the foraging reorientation rate as a decaying parameter. By
stochastically sampling from the probability distribution defined by this rate,
both abrupt and gradual changes to reorientation rates can occur, matching
experimentally observed results. Crucially, this model does not depend on
behavioral states or information accumulation. Even though abrupt behavioral
changes do occur, they may not necessarily be indicative of abrupt changes in
behavioral states, especially when abrupt changes are not universally observed
in the population. |
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ISSN: | 2331-8422 |