‘Lendület’ Program of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences(Grant No. LP2015-2/2015)
European Research Council(Grant No. StG 715043)
Subjects:
Basic medicine
Understanding how the brain controls behavior requires observing and manipulating
neural activity in awake behaving animals. Neuronal firing is timed at millisecond
precision. Therefore, to decipher temporal coding, it is necessary to monitor and
control animal behavior at the same level of temporal accuracy. However, it is technically
challenging to deliver sensory stimuli and reinforcers as well as to read the behavioral
responses they elicit with millisecond precision. Presently available commercial systems
often excel in specific aspects of behavior control, but they do not provide a customizable
environment allowing flexible experimental design while maintaining high standards
for temporal control necessary for interpreting neuronal activity. Moreover, delay
measurements of stimulus and reinforcement delivery are largely unavailable. We combined
microcontroller-based behavior control with a sound delivery system for playing complex
acoustic stimuli, fast solenoid valves for precisely timed reinforcement delivery
and a custom-built sound attenuated chamber using high-end industrial insulation materials.
Together this setup provides a physical environment to train head-fixed animals, enables
calibrated sound stimuli and precisely timed fluid and air puff presentation as reinforcers.
We provide latency measurements for stimulus and reinforcement delivery and an algorithm
to perform such measurements on other behavior control systems. Combined with electrophysiology
and optogenetic manipulations, the millisecond timing accuracy will help interpret
temporally precise neural signals and behavioral changes. Additionally, since software
and hardware provided here can be readily customized to achieve a large variety of
paradigms, these solutions enable an unusually flexible design of rodent behavioral
experiments.