Literature DB >> 16407432

Local shuffling of spike trains boosts the accuracy of spike train spectral analysis.

Michal Rivlin-Etzion1, Ya'acov Ritov, Gali Heimer, Hagai Bergman, Izhar Bar-Gad.   

Abstract

Spectral analysis of neuronal spike trains is an important tool in understanding the characteristics of neuronal activity by providing insights into normal and pathological periodic oscillatory phenomena. However, the refractory period creates high-frequency modulations in spike-train firing rate because any rise in the discharge rate causes a descent in subsequent time bins, leading to multifaceted modifications in the structure of the spectrum. Thus the power spectrum of the spiking activity (autospectrum) displays elevated energy in high frequencies relative to the lower frequencies. The spectral distortion is more dominant in neurons with high firing rates and long refractory periods and can lead to reduced identification of low-frequency oscillations (such as the 5- to 10-Hz burst oscillations typical of Parkinsonian basal ganglia and thalamus). We propose a compensation process that uses shuffling of interspike intervals (ISIs) for reliable identification of oscillations in the entire frequency range. This compensation is further improved by local shuffling, which preserves the slow changes in the discharge rate that may be lost in global shuffling. Cross-spectra of pairs of neurons are similarly distorted regardless of their correlation level. Consequently, identification of low-frequency synchronous oscillations, even for two neurons recorded by a single electrode, is improved by ISI shuffling. The ISI local shuffling is computed with confidence limits that are based on the first-order statistics of the spike trains, thus providing a reliable estimation of auto- and cross-spectra of spike trains and making it an optimal tool for physiological studies of oscillatory neuronal phenomena.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16407432     DOI: 10.1152/jn.00055.2005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurophysiol        ISSN: 0022-3077            Impact factor:   2.714


  42 in total

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5.  Deep brain stimulation of the globus pallidus internus in the parkinsonian primate: local entrainment and suppression of low-frequency oscillations.

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8.  Primary motor cortex of the parkinsonian monkey: differential effects on the spontaneous activity of pyramidal tract-type neurons.

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9.  The subthalamic nucleus in primary dystonia: single-unit discharge characteristics.

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10.  Subthalamic nucleus neurons are synchronized to primary motor cortex local field potentials in Parkinson's disease.

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