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Dive into the research topics where Michael G. Metzen is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael G. Metzen.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Serotonin selectively enhances perception and sensory neural responses to stimuli generated by same-sex conspecifics

Tara Deemyad; Michael G. Metzen; Yingzhou Pan; Maurice J. Chacron

Significance Serotonergic innervation of sensory areas is seen ubiquitously across species and systems, but its functional role remains unclear to this day. We used a systems level approach to investigate the functional role of serotonergic input onto electrosensory pyramidal neurons in the weakly electric fish Apteronotus leptorhynchus. We found that serotonin selectively improved neuronal responses to stimuli associated with same-sex conspecifics by inducing increased excitability and burst firing. Further, serotonin enhanced perception of these stimuli while simultaneously inhibiting aggressive behaviors. Our results provide the first evidence that the serotonergic system acts as a “shut up and listen” system, thereby favoring covert behavior after an aggressive encounter together with enhanced perception of stimuli associated with dominant conspecifics. Centrifugal serotonergic fibers innervating sensory brain areas are seen ubiquitously across systems and species but their function remains unclear. Here we examined the functional role of serotonergic innervation onto electrosensory neurons in weakly electric fish by eliciting endogenous release through electrical stimulation as well as exogenous focal application of serotonin in the vicinity of the cell being recorded from. Both approaches showed that the function of serotonergic input onto electrosensory pyramidal neurons is to render them more excitable by reducing the spike afterhyperpolarization amplitude and thereby promoting burst firing. Further, serotonergic input selectively improved neuronal responses to stimuli that occur during interactions between same-sex conspecifics but not to stimuli associated with either prey or that occur during interactions between opposite-sex conspecifics. Finally, we tested whether serotonin-mediated enhanced pyramidal neuron responses to stimuli associated with same-sex conspecifics actually increase perception by the animal. Our behavioral experiments show that exogenous injection and endogenous release of serotonin both increase the magnitude of behavioral responses to stimuli associated with same-sex conspecifics as well as simultaneously decrease aggressive behaviors. Thus, our data indicate that the serotonergic system inhibits aggressive behavior toward same-sex conspecifics, while at the same time increasing perception of stimuli associated with these individuals. This function is likely to be conserved across systems and species.


Biological Cybernetics | 2008

Electric imaging through active electrolocation: implication for the analysis of complex scenes

Jacob Engelmann; Joao Bacelo; Michael G. Metzen; Roland Pusch; Béatrice Bouton; Adriana Migliaro; Angel A. Caputi; Ruben Budelli; Kirsty Grant; Gerhard von der Emde

The electric sense of mormyrids is often regarded as an adaptation to conditions unfavourable for vision and in these fish it has become the dominant sense for active orientation and communication tasks. With this sense, fish can detect and distinguish the electrical properties of the close environment, measure distance, perceive the 3-D shape of objects and discriminate objects according to distance or size and shape, irrespective of conductivity, thus showing a degree of abstraction regarding the interpretation of sensory stimuli. The physical properties of images projected on the sensory surface by the fish’s own discharge reveal a “Mexican hat” opposing centre-surround profile. It is likely that computation of the image amplitude to slope ratio is used to measure distance, while peak width and slope give measures of shape and contrast. Modelling has been used to explore how the images of multiple objects superimpose in a complex manner. While electric images are by nature distributed, or ‘blurred” behavioural strategies orienting sensory surfaces and the neural architecture of sensory processing networks both contribute to resolving potential ambiguities. Rostral amplification is produced by current funnelling in the head and chin appendage regions, where high density electroreceptor distributions constitute foveal regions. Central magnification of electroreceptive pathways from these regions particularly favours the detection of capacitive properties intrinsic to potential living prey. Swimming movements alter the amplitude and contrast of pre-receptor object-images but image modulation is normalised by central gain-control mechanisms that maintain excitatory and inhibitory balance, removing the contrast-ambiguity introduced by self-motion in much the same way that contrast gain-control is achieved in vision.


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2014

Weakly electric fish display behavioral responses to envelopes naturally occurring during movement: implications for neural processing

Michael G. Metzen; Maurice J. Chacron

How the brain processes natural sensory input remains an important and poorly understood problem in neuroscience. The efficient coding hypothesis asserts that the brains coding strategies are adapted to the statistics of natural stimuli in order to efficiently process them, thereby optimizing their perception by the organism. Here we examined whether gymnotiform weakly electric fish displayed behavioral responses that are adapted to the statistics of the natural electrosensory envelopes. Previous studies have shown that the envelopes resulting from movement tend to consist of low (<1 Hz) temporal frequencies and are behaviorally relevant whereas those resulting from social interactions consist of higher (>1 Hz) temporal frequencies that can thus mask more behaviorally relevant signals. We found that the self-generated electric organ discharge frequency follows the detailed time course of the envelope around a mean value that is positively offset with respect to its baseline value for temporal frequencies between 0.001 Hz and 1 Hz. The frequency-following component of this behavioral response decreased in magnitude as a power law as a function of the envelope frequency and was negligible for envelope frequencies above 1 Hz. In contrast, the offset component was relatively constant and somewhat increased for envelope frequencies above 1 Hz. Thus, our results show that weakly electric fish display behavioral responses that track the detailed time course of low but not high frequency envelope stimuli. Furthermore, we found that the magnitude of the frequency-following behavioral response matches, in a one-to-one fashion, the spectral power of natural second-order stimulus attributes observed during movement. Indeed, both decayed as a power law with the same exponent for temporal frequencies spanning three orders of magnitude. Thus, our findings suggest that the neural coding strategies used by weakly electric fish perceive the detailed time course of movement envelopes and are adapted to their statistics as found in the natural environment. They also suggest that weakly electric fish might take advantage of the differential frequency content of movement and social envelopes in order to give appropriate behavioral responses during encounters between two or more conspecifics.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Coding of envelopes by correlated but not single-neuron activity requires neural variability

Michael G. Metzen; Mohsen Jamali; Jerome Carriot; Oscar Ávila-Ǻkerberg; Kathleen E. Cullen; Maurice J. Chacron

Significance We provide the first experimental evidence (to our knowledge) that correlated population activity can serve as an extra channel to encode second-order features of sensory input in both the electrosensory and vestibular systems. Through further experiments and mathematical modeling, we show that such coding not only requires but is also optimally tuned to a nonzero level of variability. Finally, we demonstrate that only physiologically realistic decoding circuits that explicitly include the contributions of pairwise neural activity can reliably be used to reconstruct the envelope. Our results reveal new functional roles for correlated activity and neural variability that are generally applicable across systems and species. Understanding how the brain processes sensory information is often complicated by the fact that neurons exhibit trial-to-trial variability in their responses to stimuli. Indeed, the role of variability in sensory coding is still highly debated. Here, we examined how variability influences neural responses to naturalistic stimuli consisting of a fast time-varying waveform (i.e., carrier or first order) whose amplitude (i.e., envelope or second order) varies more slowly. Recordings were made from fish electrosensory and monkey vestibular sensory neurons. In both systems, we show that correlated but not single-neuron activity can provide detailed information about second-order stimulus features. Using a simple mathematical model, we made the strong prediction that such correlation-based coding of envelopes requires neural variability. Strikingly, the performance of correlated activity at predicting the envelope was similarly optimally tuned to a nonzero level of variability in both systems, thereby confirming this prediction. Finally, we show that second-order sensory information can only be decoded if one takes into account joint statistics when combining neural activities. Our results thus show that correlated but not single-neural activity can transmit information about the envelope, that such transmission requires neural variability, and that this information can be decoded. We suggest that envelope coding by correlated activity is a general feature of sensory processing that will be found across species and systems.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2015

Neural Heterogeneities Determine Response Characteristics to Second-, but Not First-Order Stimulus Features

Michael G. Metzen; Maurice J. Chacron

Neural heterogeneities are seen ubiquitously, but how they determine neural response properties remains unclear. Here we show that heterogeneities can either strongly, or not at all, influence neural responses to a given stimulus feature. Specifically, we recorded from peripheral electroreceptor neurons, which display strong heterogeneities in their resting discharge activity, in response to naturalistic stimuli consisting of a fast time-varying waveform (i.e., first-order) whose amplitude (i.e., second-order or envelope) varied slowly in the weakly electric fish Apteronotus leptorhynchus. Although electroreceptors displayed relatively homogeneous responses to first-order stimulus features, further analysis revealed two subpopulations with similar sensitivities that were excited or inhibited by increases in the envelope, respectively, for stimuli whose frequency content spanned the natural range. We further found that a linear–nonlinear cascade model incorporating the known linear response characteristics to first-order features and a static nonlinearity accurately reproduced experimentally observed responses to both first- and second-order features for all stimuli tested. Importantly, this model correctly predicted that the response magnitude is independent of either the stimulus waveforms or the envelopes frequency content. Further analysis of our model led to the surprising prediction that the mean discharge activity can be used to determine whether a given neuron is excited or inhibited by increases in the envelope. This prediction was validated by our experimental data. Thus, our results provide key insight as to how neural heterogeneities can determine response characteristics to some, but not other, behaviorally relevant stimulus features.


eLife | 2016

Neural correlations enable invariant coding and perception of natural stimuli in weakly electric fish

Michael G. Metzen; Volker Hofmann; Maurice J. Chacron

Neural representations of behaviorally relevant stimulus features displaying invariance with respect to different contexts are essential for perception. However, the mechanisms mediating their emergence and subsequent refinement remain poorly understood in general. Here, we demonstrate that correlated neural activity allows for the emergence of an invariant representation of natural communication stimuli that is further refined across successive stages of processing in the weakly electric fish Apteronotus leptorhynchus. Importantly, different patterns of input resulting from the same natural communication stimulus occurring in different contexts all gave rise to similar behavioral responses. Our results thus reveal how a generic neural circuit performs an elegant computation that mediates the emergence and refinement of an invariant neural representation of natural stimuli that most likely constitutes a neural correlate of perception. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.12993.001


PLOS Computational Biology | 2015

Electrosensory Midbrain Neurons Display Feature Invariant Responses to Natural Communication Stimuli.

Tristan Aumentado-Armstrong; Michael G. Metzen; Michael K. J. Sproule; Maurice J. Chacron

Neurons that respond selectively but in an invariant manner to a given feature of natural stimuli have been observed across species and systems. Such responses emerge in higher brain areas, thereby suggesting that they occur by integrating afferent input. However, the mechanisms by which such integration occurs are poorly understood. Here we show that midbrain electrosensory neurons can respond selectively and in an invariant manner to heterogeneity in behaviorally relevant stimulus waveforms. Such invariant responses were not seen in hindbrain electrosensory neurons providing afferent input to these midbrain neurons, suggesting that response invariance results from nonlinear integration of such input. To test this hypothesis, we built a model based on the Hodgkin-Huxley formalism that received realistic afferent input. We found that multiple combinations of parameter values could give rise to invariant responses matching those seen experimentally. Our model thus shows that there are multiple solutions towards achieving invariant responses and reveals how subthreshold membrane conductances help promote robust and invariant firing in response to heterogeneous stimulus waveforms associated with behaviorally relevant stimuli. We discuss the implications of our findings for the electrosensory and other systems.


IEEE Sensors Journal | 2012

A Biomimetic Active Electrolocation Sensor for Detection of Atherosclerotic Lesions in Blood Vessels

Michael G. Metzen; S. Biswas; Herbert Bousack; Martin Gottwald; K. Mayekar; G. von der Emde

Weakly electric fish sense their surroundings in complete darkness by active electrolocation. In a biomimetic approach, we designed catheter-based technical sensor systems working according to the same biological principles that could be used for medical diagnostics of arteriosclerosis. Several measurements using artificial blood vessels, computer simulations, and a physical test bed showed that it is possible to detect and analyze vulnerable plaques in blood vessels and that our method of signal production and analysis is principally suitable for medical diagnostics.


Neuroscience Letters | 2015

Parallel sparse and dense information coding streams in the electrosensory midbrain

Michael K. J. Sproule; Michael G. Metzen; Maurice J. Chacron

Efficient processing of incoming sensory information is critical for an organisms survival. It has been widely observed across systems and species that the representation of sensory information changes across successive brain areas. Indeed, peripheral sensory neurons tend to respond densely to a broad range of sensory stimuli while more central neurons tend to instead respond sparsely to a narrow range of stimuli. Such a transition might be advantageous as sparse neural codes are thought to be metabolically efficient and optimize coding efficiency. Here we investigated whether the neural code transitions from dense to sparse within the midbrain Torus semicircularis (TS) of weakly electric fish. Confirming previous results, we found both dense and sparse coding neurons. However, subsequent histological classification revealed that most dense neurons projected to higher brain areas. Our results thus provide strong evidence against the hypothesis that the neural code transitions from dense to sparse in the electrosensory system. Rather, they support the alternative hypothesis that higher brain areas receive parallel streams of dense and sparse coded information from the electrosensory midbrain. We discuss the implications and possible advantages of such a coding strategy and argue that it is a general feature of sensory processing.


Neuroscience | 2014

Serotonin modulates electrosensory processing and behavior via 5-HT2-like receptors

Erik A. Larson; Michael G. Metzen; Maurice J. Chacron

Efficient sensory processing of the environment is a critical function for any organism to survive and is accomplished by having neurons adapt their responses to stimuli based on behavioral context in part through neuromodulators such as serotonin (5-HT). We have recently shown that one critical function of the serotonergic system in weakly electric fish is to enhance sensory pyramidal neuron responses within the electrosensory lateral line lobe (ELL) to stimuli caused by same sex conspecifics, thereby enhancing their perception. This enhancement is accomplished by making pyramidal neurons more excitable through downregulation of potassium channels. However, the nature of the 5-HT receptors that mediate this effect is not known. Here we show that the 5-HT2 receptor antagonist ketanserin (ket) can effectively block the effects of 5-HT on pyramidal neuron excitability in vitro. Indeed, 5-HT application subsequent to ket application did not cause any significant changes in neuron excitability and responses to current injection. We further show that ket applied in vivo can block the effects of 5-HT on behavioral responses. Thus, our results strongly suggest that the previously observed effects of 5-HT on sensory processing within ELL and their consequences for behavior are mediated by 5-HT2 receptors.

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Herbert Bousack

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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