Research

Synaptic circuits and odor processing in the rodent brain

The vast capacity of the brain to process and store information arises from the large number of neurons and their synaptic connectivity. Research in our laboratory is motivated by general questions of how synapses operate and how they contribute to information processing and adaptation in circuits. While much of our past research has been in simple and accessible model systems in vitro, our current and future work centers on intact circuits in the rodent brain.

The rodent olfactory brain (the olfactory bulb and cortex) is now a target of significant effort in our lab. We develop and use novel optical and physiological methods in the living animal to seek answers to the following general questions:

(1) How is odor information represented in the early stages of the olfactory system?

(2) What is the logic of functional synaptic circuits in the early stages of the olfactory system?

(3) How is information processing affected by different brain states - sleep, wakefulness and neuromodulation?

(4) How are functional circuits in the olfactory system regulated by odor experience?