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A lexical approach for identifying behavioral action sequences

View ORCID ProfileGautam Reddy, Laura Desban, Hidenori Tanaka, Julian Roussel, Olivier Mirat, Claire Wyart
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.08.27.270694
Gautam Reddy
1NSF-Simons Center for Mathematical & Statistical Analysis of Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138
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  • ORCID record for Gautam Reddy
  • For correspondence: gautam_nallamala@fas.harvard.edu
Laura Desban
2Institut du Cerveau (ICM), Inserm U 1127, CNRS UMR 7225, Sorbonne Université, Paris, France
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Hidenori Tanaka
3Physics & Informatics Laboratories, NTT Research, Inc., East Palo Alto, CA 94303
4Department of Applied Physics, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305
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Julian Roussel
2Institut du Cerveau (ICM), Inserm U 1127, CNRS UMR 7225, Sorbonne Université, Paris, France
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Olivier Mirat
2Institut du Cerveau (ICM), Inserm U 1127, CNRS UMR 7225, Sorbonne Université, Paris, France
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Claire Wyart
2Institut du Cerveau (ICM), Inserm U 1127, CNRS UMR 7225, Sorbonne Université, Paris, France
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Abstract

Animals display characteristic behavioral patterns when performing a task, such as the spiraling of a soaring bird or the surge-and-cast of a male moth searching for a female. Identifying such conserved patterns occurring rarely in noisy behavioral data is key to understanding the behavioral response to a distributed stimulus in unrestrained animals. Existing models seek to describe the dynamics of behavior or segment individual locomotor episodes rather than to identify occasional, transient irregularities that make up the behavioral response. To fill this gap, we develop a lexical, hierarchical model of behavior. We designed an unsupervised algorithm called “BASS” to efficiently identify and segment conserved behavioral action sequences transiently occurring in long behavioral recordings. When applied to navigating larval zebrafish, BASS extracts a dictionary of remarkably long, non-Markovian sequences consisting of repeats and mixtures of slow forward and turn bouts. Applied to a novel chemotaxis assay, BASS uncovers conserved chemotactic strategies deployed by zebrafish to avoid aversive cues consisting of sequences of fast large-angle turns and burst swims. In a simulated dataset of soaring gliders climbing thermals, BASS finds the spiralling patterns characteristic of soaring behavior. In both cases, BASS succeeds in identifying action sequences that are highly conserved but transient in the behavior deployed by freely moving animals. BASS can be easily incorporated into the pipelines of existing behavioral analyses across diverse species, and even more broadly used as a generic algorithm for pattern recognition in low-dimensional sequential data.

Competing Interest Statement

C.W. and O.M. disclose a potential conflict of interest with the commercialization of the tracking algorithm ZebraZoom (www.zebrazoom.org). The authors declare no conflict of interest otherwise.

Footnotes

  • ↵† claire.wyart{at}icm-institute.org

  • https://github.com/greddy992/BASS

Copyright 
The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license.
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Posted August 27, 2020.
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A lexical approach for identifying behavioral action sequences
Gautam Reddy, Laura Desban, Hidenori Tanaka, Julian Roussel, Olivier Mirat, Claire Wyart
bioRxiv 2020.08.27.270694; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.08.27.270694
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A lexical approach for identifying behavioral action sequences
Gautam Reddy, Laura Desban, Hidenori Tanaka, Julian Roussel, Olivier Mirat, Claire Wyart
bioRxiv 2020.08.27.270694; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.08.27.270694

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