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Social Media Posts: Misleading Windows to Our Personalities – Neuroscience News

Summary: New research reveals that social media posts, particularly on Facebook, can lead to misconceptions about our personalities.

The study analyzed Facebook status updates and found significant differences between how users perceive themselves and how others view them. Updates with multimedia content like photos and videos provided a more accurate reflection of personality than text-only posts.

This research highlights the complexities of digital identity construction and the potential for misinterpretation in the realm of social media.

Key Facts:

Source: Cornell University

People may form inaccurate impressions about us from our social media posts, finds new Cornell University research that is the first to examine perceptions of our personalities based on online posts.

An analysis of Facebook status updates found substantial discrepancies between how viewers saw the authors across a range of personality traits, and the authors self-perceptions. Viewers rated the Facebook users on average as having lower self-esteem and being more self-revealing, for example, than the users rated themselves.

Status updates containing photos, video or links in addition to text facilitated more accurate assessments than those with just text, the researchers found. Overall, they said, the study sheds light on the dynamic process by which a cyber audience tries to make sense of who we are from isolated fragments of shared information, jointly constructing our digital identity.

The impression people form about us on social media based on what we post can differ from the way we view ourselves, saidQi Wang, professor of psychology and director of theCulture & Cognition Lab. A mismatch between who we are and how people perceive us could influence our ability to feel connected online and the benefits of engaging in social media interaction.

Wang is the lead author of The Self Online: When Meaning-Making is Outsourced to the Cyber Audience, published inPLOS One.

Prior research has focused on perceptions of personality traits gleaned from personal websites, such as blogs or online profiles, finding that readers can assess them accurately. The Cornell researchers believe their study is the first to investigate audience perceptions of social media users through their posts, on platforms where users often dont share cohesive personal narratives while interacting with friends they may know only a little or sometimes not at all.

Interestingly, the study found that Facebook status updates generated perceptions of users that were consistent with cultural norms in offline contexts concerning gender and ethnicity even though viewers were blind to their identities.

For example, female Facebook users were rated as more extraverted than male users, in line with general findings that women score higher on extraversion. White Facebook users were seen as being more extraverted and having greater self-esteem than Asian users, whose cultures place more emphasis on modesty, Wang said.

We present ourselves in line with our cultural frameworks, she said, and others can discern our cultured persona through meaning making of our posts.

The scholars said future research should explore this outsourced meaning-making process with larger samples of posts, and on other popular platforms such as Instagram and X, formerly known as Twitter.

Wang said the findings could help developers design interfaces that allow people to express themselves most authentically. For users, misunderstandings about who they are on social media might not cause direct harm, she said, but could hinder their efforts to foster good communication and relationships.

If peoples view of us is very different from who we actually are, or how we would like to be perceived, Wang said, it could undermine our social life and well-being.

Author: Becka Bowyer Source: Cornell University Contact: Becka Bowyer Cornell University Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News

Original Research: Open access. The self online: When meaning-making is outsourced to the cyber audience by Qi Wang et al. PLOS ONE

Abstract

The self online: When meaning-making is outsourced to the cyber audience

This study examines the cyber audiences perception of social media users persona based on their online posts from a cognitive meaning-making perspective. Participants (N = 158) answered questions about their personal characteristics and provided their 20 most recent Facebook status updates.

Two groups of viewers, who viewed either the text-only or multimedia version of the status updates, answered questions about the Facebook users personal characteristics. The viewers perceptions of Facebook users deviated from the users self-perceptions, although user characteristics that serve social motives were more accurately perceived.

Multimedia viewers were more accurate than text viewers, whereas the latter showed a greater consensus. Gender and ethnic differences of Facebook users also emerged in online person perceptions, in line with gendered and cultured characteristics.

These findings shed critical light on the dynamic interplay between social media users and the cyber audience in the co-construction of a digitally extended self.

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Social Media Posts: Misleading Windows to Our Personalities - Neuroscience News

Multivitamins May Slow Cognitive Aging – Neuroscience News

Summary: A new study suggests that daily multivitamin supplements may help slow cognitive aging and memory loss in older adults. The study found statistically significant benefits of multivitamins for memory and global cognition, indicating a potential delay in cognitive aging by about two years compared to placebo.

This research, a part of a nationwide trial, included detailed cognitive assessments in-person and through telephone and web-based methods. The findings could have significant implications for older adults looking for accessible ways to preserve brain health.

Key Facts:

Source: Mass General

By 2060, according to the Alzheimers Association, nearly one in four Americans will be in an age bracket at elevated risk of cognitive decline and Alzheimers disease unless interventions can help preserve cognitive function before deficits begin.

The COcoa Supplement and Multivitamin Outcomes Study (COSMOS) is a large-scale, nationwide, randomized trial rigorously testing cocoa extract and multivitamin supplements directed by researchers at Mass General Brigham.

Two previously published studies of cognition in COSMOS suggested a positive effect for a daily multivitamin. COSMOS researchers now report the results of a third study of cognition in COSMOS, which focused on participants who underwent in-person assessments, together with the results of a combined analysis from the three separate studies.

The results from this latest report confirm consistent and statistically significant benefits of a daily multivitamin versus placebo for both memory and global cognition.

Results are published today inTheAmerican Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

Cognitive decline is among the top health concerns for most older adults, and a daily supplement of multivitamins has the potential as an appealing and accessible approach to slow cognitive aging, said first author Chirag Vyas, MBBS, MPH, instructor in investigation at the Department of Psychiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), a founding member of the Mass General Brigham healthcare system.

In the in-clinic study the researchers administered detailed, in-person cognitive assessments among 573 participants in the subset of COSMOS known as COSMOS-Clinic. Within COSMOS, two previous studies had tested multivitamin supplementation on cognition using telephone-based cognitive assessments (COSMOS-MIND) and online web-based cognitive assessments (COSMOS-Web).

In their prespecified analyses of data from COSMOS-Clinic, investigators observed a modest benefit for the multivitamin, compared to placebo, on global cognition over two years. There was a statistically significant benefit of multivitamin supplementation for change in episodic memory, but not in executive function/attention.

The team also conducted a meta-analysis based on the three separate studies, with non-overlapping COSMOS participants (ranging 2-3 years in treatment duration), which showed strong evidence of benefits for both global cognition and episodic memory. The authors estimate that the daily multivitamin slowed global cognitive aging by the equivalent of two years compared to placebo.

Vyas said, The meta-analysis of three separate cognition studies provides strong and consistent evidence that taking a daily multivitamin, containing more than 20 essential micronutrients, helps prevent memory loss and slow down cognitive aging.

Olivia Okereke, MD SM, senior author of the report and director of Geriatric Psychiatry at MGH, added These findings will garner attention among many older adults who are, understandably, very interested in ways to preserve brain health, as they provide evidence for the role of a daily multivitamin in supporting better cognitive aging.

The overall COSMOS trial is led by JoAnn Manson, MD, DrPH, and Howard Sesso, ScD, MPH, both of Brigham and Womens Hospital (BWH), also a founding member of Mass General Brigham. Manson, co-author of the report and Chief of the Division of Preventive Medicine at BWH, commented:

The finding that a daily multivitamin improved memory and slowed cognitive aging in three separate placebo-controlled studies in COSMOS is exciting and further supports the promise of multivitamins as a safe, accessible and affordable approach to protecting cognitive health in older adults.

The COSMOS consortium of cognitive studies represents a collaboration between MGH, BWH, Columbia University, and Wake Forest University, using both traditional and innovative approaches to assessing cognitive outcomes.

These approaches allow large numbers of participants (>5,000 in total) to be included in cognitive studies in a high-quality and cost-efficient manner. COSMOS participants are aged 60 and older and reside throughout the U.S.

Sesso, also a co-author and the associate director of the BWH Division of Preventive Medicine, added: With these three studies using different approaches for assessing cognition in COSMOS, each providing support for a daily multivitamin, it is now critical to understand the mechanisms by which a daily multivitamin may protect against memory loss and cognitive decline with a focus on nutritional status and other aging-related factors.

For example, the modifying role of baseline nutritional status on protecting against cognitive decline has been shown for the COSMOS cocoa extract intervention. A typical multivitamin such as that tested in COSMOS contains many essential vitamins and minerals that could explain its potential benefits.

COSMOS Cognition Coauthors:

Chirag M. Vyas (MGH), JoAnn E. Manson (BWH); Howard D. Sesso (BWH); Nancy R. Cook (BWH); Pamela M. Rist (BWH); Alison Weinberg (BWH); M Vinayaga Moorthy (BWH); Laura D. Baker (Wake Forest University); Mark A. Espeland (Wake Forest University); Lok-Kin Yeung (Columbia University); Adam M. Brickman (Columbia University); Olivia I. Okereke (MGH).

Disclosures:Sesso additionally reported receiving investigator-initiated grants from Pure Encapsulations and Pfizer Inc. and honoraria and/or travel for lectures from the Council for Responsible Nutrition, BASF, NIH, and the American Society of Nutrition during the conduct of the study.

Funding:COSMOS-Clinic and the cognition studies in the meta-analysis were supportedin partby investigator-initiated grants from Mars Edge, a segment of Mars Inc., and the National Institutes of Health. Multivitamin and placebo tablets and packaging were donated by Pfizer, Inc Consumer Healthcare (now Haleon).

Author: Serena Bronda Source: Mass General Contact: Serena Bronda Mass General Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News

Original Research: The findings will appear in American Journal of Clinical Nutrition

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Multivitamins May Slow Cognitive Aging - Neuroscience News

St. Louis All Local PM: More cold and snow, WashU neuroscience, facial recognition, Bar PM video, John Mozeliak … – KMOX

The top local news with Michael Calhoun and the KMOX news team.

Stories include: More winter weather's on the way for tonight. Washington University's new Neuroscience Research Building, between the hospital complex and Cortex, is being called the hub for the world's largest concentration of neuro-scientists. With just one look, technology developed here in the St. Louis region can stop criminals before they ever step foot in a store. Newly released bystander video shows the moment one of the owners of BAR:PM is arrested by officers. Groups that support abortion rights in Missouri officially launched their petition drive today. Menthol cigarettes are a personal issue for St. Louis Mayor Tishuara Jones.

Plus, Matt Pauley goes in-depth with Cardinals President of Baseball Operations John Mozeliak and Michael talks with Wall Street Journal reporter Will Feuer about entertainment venues facing fewer sales on weeknights.

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St. Louis All Local PM: More cold and snow, WashU neuroscience, facial recognition, Bar PM video, John Mozeliak ... - KMOX

MEDIA ADVISORY: Dedication of Washington University Neuroscience Research Building Washington University … – Washington University School of…

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Depression and Schizophrenia Impact Learning – Neuroscience News

Summary: A new study reveals that patients with schizophrenia or depression struggle with optimal information utilization in learning processes.

Using EEG and advanced computer modeling, researchers found that these patients place greater emphasis on less important information, leading to suboptimal decision-making. This diminished flexibility in processing new information was particularly pronounced in feedback management for future behavior.

The findings suggest cognitive limitations in schizophrenia and depression could be addressed through targeted treatments focusing on these specific learning deficits.

Key Facts:

Source: Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg

When learning, patients with schizophrenia or depression have difficulty making optimal use of information that is new to them. In the learning process, both groups of patients give greater weight to less important information and, as a result, make less than ideal decisions.

This was the finding of a several-months-long study conducted by a team led by neuroscientist Professor Dr. med. Markus Ullsperger from the Institute of Psychology at Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg in collaboration with colleagues from the University Clinic for Psychiatry & Psychotherapy and the German Center for Mental Health.

By using electroencephalography (EEG) and complex mathematical computer modeling, the team of researchers discovered that learning deficits in depressive and schizophrenicpatientsare caused by diminished/reduced flexibility in the use of new information.

The study has just beenpublishedinBrainand is titled Transdiagnostic inflexible learning dynamics explain deficits in depression and schizophrenia.

People with depression or schizophrenia often suffer from cognitive limitations, says the lead author of the study, Dr. Hans Kirschner. For example, they find it difficult to understand complex information, to learn, to plan or to generalize a situation.

In particular, deficits in using feedback from the past to manage future behavior, poses a fundamental problem for those affected.

Dr. Tilmann Klein, neuropsychologist and psychotherapist adds that these cognitive limitations are very onerous for the affected groups of patients and have a strong influence on the outcome of treatment.

If we understand these deficits and their causes better, in the long term we can design forms of treatment such as functional training to be more specific and targeted.

To find out whether the psychological and neuronal mechanisms that lead to cognitive limitations are the same in different mental disorders, the scientists examined patients with a diagnosis of a severe depressive disorder and of schizophrenia as well as acontrol groupcomprising 33 people.

The test subjects were repeatedly presented with images of animals on a screen that were associated with either a high or low probability of reward or punishment, that is positive ornegative feedback.

The test subjects had to decide whether they wanted to bet on the animal or not, and thus either win or lose 10 points. If they did not bet, they neither won nor lost anything, but would then see what would have happened, had they opted to bet.

Dr. Kirschner describes the test setup as follows: During the experiment, the objective for the participants was to find out whether it was worthwhile betting and therefore risking the loss that might entail, or if it was better not to bet and thus avoid losing.

The process is a little bit like a game of roulette, explains the neuroscientist. If you place your bet, you either win or lose. If you do not bet, you nevertheless get to see where the little ball ends up and you can work out what would have happened if you had placed a bet.

The difference in our study is that the participants were actually able to learn because over time they came to realize if an animal was more likely, on average, to be rewarded or punished and could then either always bet on the animal and thus maximize their winnings or minimize their losses.

According to Kirschner, optimal learning in this task would mean that thetest subjectstook more note of the feedbacki.e., the wins or losses of an animalat the beginning of thelearning process.

Once they have a feel for an animals likelihood of winning, they ignore misleading feedback, for example, a picture that usually is highly likely to lose also wins occasionally.

While healthy control participants did exactly this, the patient groups that were suffering from depression or schizophrenia were more strongly influenced by randomly occurring errors.

Imagine a basketball player throwing balls at a basket, Dr. Kirschner goes on to say. A poor player scores rarely and is not picked for the team. Even if they do not score every time, a good player scores often and is therefore picked for the team. However, in the study, both groups of patients would replace the good player after a poor shot.

In the EEG it could be seen that both patient groups have a diminished neuronal representation of reward expectation.

This means that the scoring rate of a good basketball player is not stored as well in the brain and is more quickly overwritten, when the player occasionally fails to score.

In summary, Dr. Kirschner explains that the study expanded the teams knowledge of cognitive limitations in patients with a diagnosis of schizophrenia or depression. In particular we were also able to demonstrate the benefits of computer models in which we attempt to describe complex learning mechanisms mathematically and implement them in the form of computer simulations.

This made it possible to simulate hard-to-predict learning behavior and compare it with the behavior of participants inspecific tasks.

With this approach in [the] future, we will be able to quantify and characterize learning deficits in a more nuanced way. And a better understanding of these deficits will, in turn, help direct us towards further developing existing treatments for depression and schizophrenia in a more targeted way.

We hope that in future our research will benefit patients affected by learning impairments and help them to cope better in their everyday lives.

Author: Katharina Vorwerk Source: Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg Contact: Katharina Vorwerk Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News

Original Research: Open access. Transdiagnostic inflexible learning dynamics explain deficits in depression and schizophrenia by Hans Kirschner et al. Brain

Abstract

Transdiagnostic inflexible learning dynamics explain deficits in depression and schizophrenia

Deficits in reward learning are core symptoms across many mental disorders. Recent work suggests that such learning impairments arise by a diminished ability to use reward history to guide behaviour, but the neuro-computational mechanisms through which these impairments emerge remain unclear. Moreover, limited work has taken a transdiagnostic approach to investigate whether the psychological and neural mechanisms that give rise to learning deficits are shared across forms of psychopathology.

To provide insight into this issue, we explored probabilistic reward learning in patients diagnosed with major depressive disorder (n= 33) or schizophrenia (n= 24) and 33 matched healthy controls by combining computational modelling and single-trial EEG regression. In our task, participants had to integrate the reward history of a stimulus to decide whether it is worthwhile to gamble on it. Adaptive learning in this task is achieved through dynamic learning rates that are maximal on the first encounters with a given stimulus and decay with increasing stimulus repetitions. Hence, over the course of learning, choice preferences would ideally stabilize and be less susceptible to misleading information.

We show evidence of reduced learning dynamics, whereby both patient groups demonstrated hypersensitive learning (i.e. less decaying learning rates), rendering their choices more susceptible to misleading feedback. Moreover, there was a schizophrenia-specific approach bias and a depression-specific heightened sensitivity to disconfirmational feedback (factual losses and counterfactual wins). The inflexible learning in both patient groups was accompanied by altered neural processing, including no tracking of expected values in either patient group.

Taken together, our results thus provide evidence that reduced trial-by-trial learning dynamics reflect a convergent deficit across depression and schizophrenia. Moreover, we identified disorder distinct learning deficits.

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Depression and Schizophrenia Impact Learning - Neuroscience News

What makes love so strong? The neuroscience behind love and loss – Open Access Government

Published in the journal Current Biology on January 12, the research focuses on prairie voles, understanding the intricate role of dopamine in maintaining long-term relationships similar to human bonds.

Prairie voles are among the rare 3% to 5% of mammals that form monogamous pair bonds, offering a unique opportunity to study the neurochemical basis of intimate relationships.

Like humans, prairie voles engage in long-term partnerships, share a home, raise offspring, and experience a sense of grief when separated from their partners.

The research, led by senior author Zoe Donaldson, associate professor of behavioural neuroscience at CU Boulder, utilises state-of-the-art neuroimaging technology to look into the real-time brain activity of voles during attempts to reunite with their partners.

The findings reveal that dopamine, a neurotransmitter associated with pleasure and reward, plays a pivotal role in sustaining the bonds of love.

Donaldson explains, As humans, our entire social world is basically defined by different degrees of selective desire to interact with different people, whether its your romantic partner or your close friends. This research suggests that certain people leave a unique chemical imprint on our brain that drives us to maintain these bonds over time.

certain people leave a unique chemical imprint on our brain

The researchers monitored the voles as they navigated obstacles to reach their partners, with a fibre-optic sensor tracking dopamine activity in the nucleus accumbens, a region responsible for motivating individuals to seek rewarding experiences.

The results showed that dopamine surges, lighting up the voles brains like a glow stick during interactions with their life partners.

Anne Pierce, the studys first author, explains, This suggests that not only is dopamine really important for motivating us to seek out our partner, but theres actually more dopamine coursing through our reward center when we are with our partner than when we are with a stranger.

In an experiment simulating separation, the voles were kept apart for four weeks, a significant duration in their lives. Upon reuniting, while the voles remembered each other, their signature dopamine surge had diminished significantly. The researchers interpret this as a neural reset, allowing the animals to form new bonds.

The implications for humans are deep, especially for those suffering from heartbreak or loss. The study hints at an inherent mechanism within the brain to protect individuals from prolonged, unrequited love.

The authors acknowledge the need for further research to determine how well these results translate to humans. They believe the findings could offer insights into mental health conditions affecting social relationships.

Zoe Donaldson expresses hope for the future, stating, The hope is that by understanding what healthy bonds look like within the brain, we can begin to identify new therapies to help the many people with mental illnesses that affect their social world.

This research provides a glimpse into the neuroscience of love and holds promise for potential therapeutic interventions to assist those struggling with forming or overcoming close relationships. As the field progresses, scientists aim to unlock the mysteries of the human brain, offering new perspectives on emotional bonds and avenues for mental health support.

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What makes love so strong? The neuroscience behind love and loss - Open Access Government

Munchies Mystery Solved: Cannabis Activates Brain’s Appetite Neurons – Neuroscience News

Summary: Researchers uncovered how cannabis triggers appetite in the brain. Using calcium imaging technology to observe brain cells in mice exposed to vaporized cannabis sativa, the team discovered that cannabis activates specific cells in the hypothalamus associated with the anticipation and consumption of food.

This finding could lead to novel treatments for appetite disorders in cancer patients, anorexia, and potentially obesity. The study highlights the cannabinoid-1 receptors role in controlling Agouti Related Protein neurons, essential for appetite, and demonstrates that disabling these neurons negates cannabiss appetite-stimulating effects.

Key Facts:

Source: Washington State University

While it is well known that cannabis can cause the munchies, researchers have now revealed a mechanism in the brain that promotes appetite in a set of animal studies at Washington State University.

The discovery, detailed in thejournalScientific Reports, could pave the way for refined therapeutics to treat appetite disorders faced by cancer patients as well as anorexia and potentially obesity.

After exposing mice to vaporized cannabis sativa, researchers used calcium imaging technology, which is similar to a brain MRI, to determine how their brain cells responded. They observed that cannabis activated a set of cells in the hypothalamus when the rodents anticipated and consumed palatable food that were not activated in unexposed mice.

When the mice are given cannabis, neurons come on that typically are not active, said Jon Davis, an assistant professor of neuroscience at WSU and corresponding author on the paper. There is something important happening in the hypothalamus after vapor cannabis.

Calcium imaging has been used to study the brains reactions to food by other researchers, but this is the first known study to use it to understand those features following cannabis exposure.

As part of this research, the researchers also determined that the cannabinoid-1 receptor, a known cannabis target, controlled the activity of a well-known set of feeding cells in the hypothalamus, called Agouti Related Protein neurons.

With this information, they used a chemogenetic technique, which acts like a molecular light switch, to home in on these neurons when animals were exposed to cannabis. When these neurons were turned off, cannabis no longer promoted appetite.

We now know one of the ways that the brain responds to recreational-type cannabis to promote appetite, said Davis.

This work builds onprevious research on cannabis and appetitefrom Davis lab, which was among the first to use whole vaporized cannabis plant matter in animal studies instead of injected THCin an effort to better mimic how cannabis is used by humans. In the previous work, the researchers identified genetic changes in the hypothalamus in response to cannabis, so in this study, Davis and his colleagues focused on that area.

Funding: The current research received support from the Alcohol and Drug Abuse Research Program, the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture as well as by funds provided by the state of Washington Initiative Measure No. 171.

Author: Sara Zaske Source: Washington State University Contact: Sara Zaske Washington State University Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News

Original Research: Open access. Cannabis Sativa targets mediobasal hypothalamic neurons to stimulate appetite by Jon Davis et al. Scientific Reports

Abstract

Cannabis Sativa targets mediobasal hypothalamic neurons to stimulate appetite

The neurobiological mechanisms that regulate the appetite-stimulatory properties ofcannabis sativaare unresolved. This work examined the hypothesis that cannabinoid-1 receptor (CB1R) expressing neurons in the mediobasal hypothalamus (MBH) regulate increased appetite following cannabis vapor inhalation.

Here we utilized a paradigm where vaporized cannabis plant matter was administered passively to rodents. Initial studies in rats characterized meal patterns and operant responding for palatable food following exposure to air or vapor cannabis.

Studies conducted in mice used a combination of in vivo optical imaging, electrophysiology and chemogenetic manipulations to determine the importance of MBH neurons for cannabis-induced feeding behavior.

Our data indicate that cannabis vapor increased meal frequency and food seeking behavior without altering locomotor activity. Importantly, we observed augmented MBH activity within distinct neuronal populations when mice anticipated or consumed food.

Mechanistic experiments demonstrated that pharmacological activation of CB1R attenuated inhibitory synaptic tone onto hunger promoting Agouti Related Peptide (AgRP) neurons within the MBH.

Lastly, chemogenetic inhibition of AgRP neurons attenuated the appetite promoting effects of cannabis vapor. Based on these results, we conclude that MBH neurons contribute to the appetite stimulatory properties of inhaled cannabis.

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Munchies Mystery Solved: Cannabis Activates Brain's Appetite Neurons - Neuroscience News

Male and Female Silkmoths Perceive Odors Differently – Neuroscience News

Summary: A study uncovers distinct olfactory worlds between male and female silkmoths, contrasting with the similar sense of smell in human males and females. Female silkmoths, previously thought to be attuned to mulberry tree odors for egg-laying, surprisingly respond more to silkworm feces odors, crucial after mating.

This discovery, made using electrophysiological methods and behavioral tests, challenges previous assumptions about female moth sensilla. Additionally, the study explores the uncharted territory of male silkmoth pheromones and reveals unique co-expression of olfactory receptors in silkmoths, expanding understanding of insect olfaction.

Key Facts:

Source: Max Planck Institute

In humans, the sense of smell is similarly developed in men and women, although women have slightly more olfactory neurons and therefore a slightly more sensitive nose. On the whole, however, they perceive the same odors.

Male moths, on the other hand, live in a completely different olfactory world to their female counterparts. For example, the antennae of male silkmoths their nose are highly specialized to detect female sex pheromones, while females cannot even smell their own pheromones.

There are thousands of sensilla on the antennae, hair-like structures, which can be divided into morphologically and functionally distinct groups. The most common sensilla in males are long and contain two sensory neurons.

One is specialized to detect bombykol, the sex pheromone of females, while the other responds to bombykal, a component of the pheromone of other moth species. While bombykol is highly attractive to male silkmoths, bombykal is a deterrent.

Because female silkmoths cannot smell their own pheromone, it was long thought that their long sensilla also have a very specific function that is only found in females. After mating, the females only task is to find a suitable plant on which to lay her eggs.

It has therefore been suggested that the long sensilla of females are specialized to detect the attractive odor of mulberry trees. We wanted to test this assumption, says Sonja Bisch-Knaden, who leads a project group in the Department of Evolutionary Neuroethology at the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology.

Long sensilla of female silkmoths recognize silkworm feces

Electrophysiological methods, such as measuring the activity of individual sensilla (single-sensillum recording), were crucial for the studys results. The scientists not only tested many different individual odors, but also natural odor mixtures, such as those found in the leaves of the mulberry tree, caterpillar droppings, the body odor of moths or the meconium, a liquid that moths secrete when they hatch.

All these odors, which play an ecological role in the silkmoths environment, had been collected. The research team was also able to match the expression of olfactory receptors to the corresponding sensillum type.

We were surprised to find that neurons in the long sensilla of female silkmoths were not specialized to detect the odor of the host plant, as expected, but that one of the two neurons in the long sensilla is very sensitive to odors such as isovaleric acid and benzaldehyde. The detection of the odor of the mulberry leaf itself is carried out by neurons in medium-length sensilla, summarizes Sonja Bisch-Knaden.

Isovaleric acid and benzaldehyde are odor components of silkworm feces. Using a simple Y-maze test with an entrance arm that splits into two side arms through which either an odor or clean air (control) is introduced, the research team was able to elicit behavior in the otherwise immobile females that expressed attraction or aversion. Major differences became apparent when comparing virgin and mated females.

The researchers showed that odors associated with caterpillar droppings did not trigger a specific reaction in virgin females, but had a deterrent effect on mated females. Presumably, the smell of feces helps females avoid mulberry trees, which are already full of silkworms when they lay their eggs.

In search of the male silkmoth pheromone

The pheromone of female silkmoths, bombykol, was chemically characterized as early as 1959 the first insect pheromone ever. So far, scientists have not been able to identify a male counterpart. The current study provides clues, but no answers to the question of a male pheromone.

The second neuron in the females long sensilla is highly specific for (+)-linalool, an odor already identified as a component of the male pheromone in other butterfly species. However, no linalool could be found in the body odor of male silkmoths, and (+)-linalool alone had neither an attractive nor a repellent effect on female silkmoths in behavioral experiments, says Sonja Bisch-Knaden.

Special features of the odor perception of silkmoths

While investigating the molecular basis of odor detection in female silkmoths, the researchers noticed a peculiarity in the spatial organization of olfactory receptors. There are two families of olfactory receptors, the evolutionary older ionotropic receptors (IRs), which detect mainly acids, and the odorant receptors (ORs), which detect a wide range of chemically diverse compounds.

Based on studies in the model flyDrosophila melanogaster, it was long thought that neurons expressing IRs or ORs usually occur in different types of sensilla, and that IRs never occur in long sensilla. In the silkmoth, however, an IR co-receptor for the detection of acids and the obligate OR co-receptor are both found in the same neurons located in long sensilla.

This co-expression of IRs and ORs increases the chemical receptivity of the sensory neurons. Odors detected by both receptor types are processed and transmitted together, which could be advantageous for the unambiguous detection of ecologically important odor mixtures.

It is amazing that research on insect olfaction continues to produce surprising results. Our study shows that it is important to study more than just one model, says Bill Hansson, head of the Department of Evolutionary Neuroethology.

The researchers also found this co-expression of the two receptor types in the long sensilla of male silkmoths, which is why they assume that the detection of acids could also play an important ecological role in males. Further investigations will now clarify this.

Author: Angela Overmeyer Source: Max Planck Institute Contact: Angela Overmeyer Max Planck Institute Image: The image is credited to Markus Knaden, Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology

Original Research: Open access. Females smell differently: characteristics and significance of the most common olfactory sensilla of female silkmoths by Sonja Bisch-Knaden et al. Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences

Abstract

Females smell differently: characteristics and significance of the most common olfactory sensilla of female silkmoths

In the silkmothBombyx mori, the role of male sensilla trichodea in pheromone detection is well established. Here we study the corresponding female sensilla, which contain two olfactory sensory neurons (OSNs) and come in two lengths, each representing a single physiological type.

Only OSNs in medium trichoids respond to the scent of mulberry, the silkworms exclusive host plant, and are more sensitive in mated females, suggesting a role in oviposition.

In long trichoids, one OSN is tuned to (+)-linalool and the other to benzaldehyde and isovaleric acid, both odours emitted by silkworm faeces. While the significance of (+)-linalool detection remains unclear, isovaleric acid repels mated females and may therefore play a role in avoiding crowded oviposition sites.

When we examined the underlying molecular components of neurons in female trichoids, we found non-canonical co-expression ofIr8a, the co-receptor for acid responses, andORco, the co-receptor of odorant receptors, in long trichoids, and the unexpected expression of a specific odorant receptor in both trichoid sensillum types.

In addition to elucidating the function of female trichoids, our results suggest that some accepted organizational principles of the insect olfactory system may not apply to the predominant sensilla on the antenna of femaleB. mori.

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Male and Female Silkmoths Perceive Odors Differently - Neuroscience News