Mice rapidly learn to discriminate stimulus direction in head-fixed paradigm.
a, A water droplet is paired with air puffs in one direction (CS+) but not the other (CS-). Licking in anticipation of water is assessed in the response window just after CS+ or CS- and prior to water delivery for the CS+ (grey bar). b, Experimental timeline. 2-3 weeks after virus injection, naive tuft responses to stimuli are recorded (pre). The CS+ is then paired with water for 8-9 days (blue). On the last day, stimuli are presented without reward (post). In a separate group of mice, the same stimuli are presented over 9 days in the absence of reward (unrewarded group). c, Lick rasters for three different sessions in one example mouse. On session 9, the CS+ but not the CS-reliably elicits licks. d, Mean baseline-subtracted whisking amplitude aligned to the CS+ (red) and CS-(navy) across sessions 1, 2, and 9 of an example mouse. e, Learning curve demonstrates rapid learning. Mean probability of at least one lick in the response window across sessions. f, Behavioral performance of each mouse in the rewarded group (M1 – M7).