Fig. 4: Connectivity of the inhibitory network after associative only and nonassociative only conditioning. | Communications Biology

Fig. 4: Connectivity of the inhibitory network after associative only and nonassociative only conditioning.

From: Plasticity in inhibitory networks improves pattern separation in early olfactory processing

Fig. 4

A Left shows the correlation between rewarded and habituated odor representations does not decrease significantly after associative (gray) conditioning (p = 0.325) but decreases significantly after nonassociative (black) conditioning (p = 2e−7) and differential (dark blue) conditioning (p = 6e−7) compared to naive (light blue). Right shows correlation calculated for odors belonging to the same class, with correlation not changing significantly after associative (gray) conditioning (p = 0.1), but decreasing modestly after nonassociative (black, p = 0.04) and differential (dark blue) conditioning (p = 0.07). The error bars represent standard deviation across n = 10 trials. Dots represent individual data points. B The LN-LN and LN-PN network after associative only training. C The LN-LN and LN-PN network after nonassociative only training. The colorbars show the value of the weights after training divided by the initial weights.

Back to article page