Literature DB >> 19391776

Serial correlation in neural spike trains: experimental evidence, stochastic modeling, and single neuron variability.

Farzad Farkhooi1, Martin F Strube-Bloss, Martin P Nawrot.   

Abstract

The activity of spiking neurons is frequently described by renewal point process models that assume the statistical independence and identical distribution of the intervals between action potentials. However, the assumption of independent intervals must be questioned for many different types of neurons. We review experimental studies that reported the feature of a negative serial correlation of neighboring intervals, commonly observed in neurons in the sensory periphery as well as in central neurons, notably in the mammalian cortex. In our experiments we observed the same short-lived negative serial dependence of intervals in the spontaneous activity of mushroom body extrinsic neurons in the honeybee. To model serial interval correlations of arbitrary lags, we suggest a family of autoregressive point processes. Its marginal interval distribution is described by the generalized gamma model, which includes as special cases the log-normal and gamma distributions, which have been widely used to characterize regular spiking neurons. In numeric simulations we investigated how serial correlation affects the variance of the neural spike count. We show that the experimentally confirmed negative correlation reduces single-neuron variability, as quantified by the Fano factor, by up to 50%, which favors the transmission of a rate code. We argue that the feature of a negative serial correlation is likely to be common to the class of spike-frequency-adapting neurons and that it might have been largely overlooked in extracellular single-unit recordings due to spike sorting errors.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19391776     DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevE.79.021905

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys        ISSN: 1539-3755


  27 in total

1.  Epileptic seizures from abnormal networks: why some seizures defy predictability.

Authors:  William S Anderson; Feraz Azhar; Pawel Kudela; Gregory K Bergey; Piotr J Franaszczuk
Journal:  Epilepsy Res       Date:  2011-12-12       Impact factor: 3.045

2.  Biophysical information representation in temporally correlated spike trains.

Authors:  William H Nesse; Leonard Maler; André Longtin
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2010-12-03       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 3.  Data-driven significance estimation for precise spike correlation.

Authors:  Sonja Grün
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2009-01-07       Impact factor: 2.714

Review 4.  Nonrenewal spike train statistics: causes and functional consequences on neural coding.

Authors:  Oscar Avila-Akerberg; Maurice J Chacron
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  2011-01-26       Impact factor: 1.972

5.  Multi-scale detection of rate changes in spike trains with weak dependencies.

Authors:  Michael Messer; Kauê M Costa; Jochen Roeper; Gaby Schneider
Journal:  J Comput Neurosci       Date:  2016-12-26       Impact factor: 1.621

6.  Noise Shaping in Neural Populations with Global Delayed Feedback.

Authors:  O Ávila Åkerberg; M J Chacron
Journal:  Math Model Nat Phenom       Date:  2010-01-01       Impact factor: 4.157

7.  Slot-like capacity and resource-like coding in a neural model of multiple-item working memory.

Authors:  Dominic Standage; Martin Paré
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2018-06-27       Impact factor: 2.714

8.  Channel noise from both slow adaptation currents and fast currents is required to explain spike-response variability in a sensory neuron.

Authors:  Karin Fisch; Tilo Schwalger; Benjamin Lindner; Andreas V M Herz; Jan Benda
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2012-11-28       Impact factor: 6.167

9.  Neural correlates of side-specific odour memory in mushroom body output neurons.

Authors:  Martin F Strube-Bloss; Martin P Nawrot; Randolf Menzel
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2016-12-14       Impact factor: 5.349

10.  Similarity in Neuronal Firing Regimes across Mammalian Species.

Authors:  Yasuhiro Mochizuki; Tomokatsu Onaga; Hideaki Shimazaki; Takeaki Shimokawa; Yasuhiro Tsubo; Rie Kimura; Akiko Saiki; Yutaka Sakai; Yoshikazu Isomura; Shigeyoshi Fujisawa; Ken-Ichi Shibata; Daichi Hirai; Takahiro Furuta; Takeshi Kaneko; Susumu Takahashi; Tomoaki Nakazono; Seiya Ishino; Yoshio Sakurai; Takashi Kitsukawa; Jong Won Lee; Hyunjung Lee; Min Whan Jung; Cecilia Babul; Pedro E Maldonado; Kazutaka Takahashi; Fritzie I Arce-McShane; Callum F Ross; Barry J Sessle; Nicholas G Hatsopoulos; Thomas Brochier; Alexa Riehle; Paul Chorley; Sonja Grün; Hisao Nishijo; Satoe Ichihara-Takeda; Shintaro Funahashi; Keisetsu Shima; Hajime Mushiake; Yukako Yamane; Hiroshi Tamura; Ichiro Fujita; Naoko Inaba; Kenji Kawano; Sergei Kurkin; Kikuro Fukushima; Kiyoshi Kurata; Masato Taira; Ken-Ichiro Tsutsui; Tadashi Ogawa; Hidehiko Komatsu; Kowa Koida; Keisuke Toyama; Barry J Richmond; Shigeru Shinomoto
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2016-05-25       Impact factor: 6.167

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