Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6267033 | Current Opinion in Neurobiology | 2012 | 8 Pages |
Sniffing and whisking are two rhythmic orofacial motor activities that enable rodents to localize and track objects in their environment. They have related temporal dynamics, possibly as a result of both shared musculature and shared sensory tasks. Sniffing and whisking also constitute the overt expression of an animal's anticipation of a reward. Yet, the neuronal mechanisms that underlie the control of these behaviors have not been established. Here, we review the similarities between sniffing and whisking and suggest that such similarities indicate a mechanistic link between these two rhythmic exploratory behaviors.
⺠Sniffing and whisking serve to gather sensory information, and occur during reward expectation. ⺠These rhythmic activities affect both the coding and central processing of sensory inputs. ⺠As sniffing and whisking exhibit a fixed temporal relationship, they may share a common circuitry.