Literature DB >> 25825717

Coding of envelopes by correlated but not single-neuron activity requires neural variability.

Michael G Metzen1, Mohsen Jamali1, Jérome Carriot1, Oscar Ávila-Ǻkerberg2, Kathleen E Cullen1, Maurice J Chacron3.   

Abstract

Understanding how the brain processes sensory information is often complicated by the fact that neurons exhibit trial-to-trial variability in their responses to stimuli. Indeed, the role of variability in sensory coding is still highly debated. Here, we examined how variability influences neural responses to naturalistic stimuli consisting of a fast time-varying waveform (i.e., carrier or first order) whose amplitude (i.e., envelope or second order) varies more slowly. Recordings were made from fish electrosensory and monkey vestibular sensory neurons. In both systems, we show that correlated but not single-neuron activity can provide detailed information about second-order stimulus features. Using a simple mathematical model, we made the strong prediction that such correlation-based coding of envelopes requires neural variability. Strikingly, the performance of correlated activity at predicting the envelope was similarly optimally tuned to a nonzero level of variability in both systems, thereby confirming this prediction. Finally, we show that second-order sensory information can only be decoded if one takes into account joint statistics when combining neural activities. Our results thus show that correlated but not single-neural activity can transmit information about the envelope, that such transmission requires neural variability, and that this information can be decoded. We suggest that envelope coding by correlated activity is a general feature of sensory processing that will be found across species and systems.

Keywords:  correlation; electrosensory; envelope; neural coding; vestibular

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25825717      PMCID: PMC4403158          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1418224112

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  47 in total

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  25 in total

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Review 5.  Vestibular processing during natural self-motion: implications for perception and action.

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