Literature DB >> 33989280

What we can and what we cannot see with extracellular multielectrodes.

Chaitanya Chintaluri1,2, Marta Bejtka1, Władysław Średniawa1,3, Michał Czerwiński1, Jakub M Dzik1, Joanna Jędrzejewska-Szmek1, Kacper Kondrakiewicz4, Ewa Kublik4, Daniel K Wójcik1.   

Abstract

Extracellular recording is an accessible technique used in animals and humans to study the brain physiology and pathology. As the number of recording channels and their density grows it is natural to ask how much improvement the additional channels bring in and how we can optimally use the new capabilities for monitoring the brain. Here we show that for any given distribution of electrodes we can establish exactly what information about current sources in the brain can be recovered and what information is strictly unobservable. We demonstrate this in the general setting of previously proposed kernel Current Source Density method and illustrate it with simplified examples as well as using evoked potentials from the barrel cortex obtained with a Neuropixels probe and with compatible model data. We show that with conceptual separation of the estimation space from experimental setup one can recover sources not accessible to standard methods.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 33989280     DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1008615

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol        ISSN: 1553-734X            Impact factor:   4.475


  1 in total

1.  Cross-population coupling of neural activity based on Gaussian process current source densities.

Authors:  Natalie Klein; Joshua H Siegle; Tobias Teichert; Robert E Kass
Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol       Date:  2021-11-17       Impact factor: 4.475

  1 in total

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