Literature DB >> 8159289

Sub-millisecond coincidence detection in active dendritic trees.

W Softky1.   

Abstract

Stimulations of a morphologically reconstructed cortical pyramidal cell suggest that the long, thin, distal dendrites of such a cell may be ideally suited for nonlinear coincidence-detection at time-scales much faster than the membrane time-constant. In the presence of dendritic sodium spiking conductances, such hypothetical computations might occur by two distinct mechanisms. In one mechanism, fast excitatory synaptic currents inside a thin dendrite create strong local depolarizations, whose repolarization--resulting from charge equalization--can be 100-fold faster than the membrane time-constant; two such potentials in exact coincidence might initiate a dendritic spike. In the alternate mechanism, dendritic sodium spikes which do not fire the soma nonetheless create somatic voltage pulses of millisecond width and a few millivolts amplitude. The soma may fire upon the exact coincidence of several of these dendritic spikes, while their strong delayed-rectifier currents prevent the soma from temporally summating them. The average firing rate of a compartmental simulation of this reconstructed cell can be highly sensitive to the precise (submillisecond) arrangement of its inputs; in one simulation, a subtle reorganization of the temporal and spatial distribution of synaptic events can determine whether the cell fires continuously at 200 Hz or not at all. The two cellular properties postulated to create this behavior--fast, strong synaptic currents and spiking conductances in the distal dendrites--are at least consistent with physiological recordings of somatic potentials from single and coincident synaptic events; further measurements are proposed. The amplitudes and decays of these simulated fast EPSPs and dendritic spikes can be quantitatively predicted by approximations based on dendritic properties, intracellular resistance, and transmembrane conductance, without invoking any free parameters. These expressions both illustrate the dominant biophysical mechanisms of these very transient events and also allow extrapolation of the simulation results to nearby parameter ranges without requiring further simulation. The possibility that cortical cells perform temporally precise computations on single spikes touches many issues in cortical processing: computational speed, spiking variability, population coding, pairwise cell correlations, multiplexed information transmission, and the functional role of the dendritic tree.

Mesh:

Year:  1994        PMID: 8159289     DOI: 10.1016/0306-4522(94)90154-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuroscience        ISSN: 0306-4522            Impact factor:   3.590


  52 in total

1.  Supralinear summation of synaptic inputs by an invertebrate neuron: dendritic gain is mediated by an "inward rectifier" K(+) current.

Authors:  R Wessel; W B Kristan; D Kleinfeld
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  1999-07-15       Impact factor: 6.167

2.  Impact of correlated synaptic input on output firing rate and variability in simple neuronal models.

Authors:  E Salinas; T J Sejnowski
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2000-08-15       Impact factor: 6.167

3.  Enhancement of signal-to-noise ratio and phase locking for small inputs by a low-threshold outward current in auditory neurons.

Authors:  Gytis Svirskis; Vibhakar Kotak; Dan H Sanes; John Rinzel
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2002-12-15       Impact factor: 6.167

4.  A hippocampal interneuron associated with the mossy fiber system.

Authors:  I Vida; M Frotscher
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2000-02-01       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Subthreshold outward currents enhance temporal integration in auditory neurons.

Authors:  Gytis Svirskis; Ramana Dodla; John Rinzel
Journal:  Biol Cybern       Date:  2003-11-28       Impact factor: 2.086

6.  Tuning neocortical pyramidal neurons between integrators and coincidence detectors.

Authors:  Michael Rudolph; Alain Destexhe
Journal:  J Comput Neurosci       Date:  2003 May-Jun       Impact factor: 1.621

7.  Precision of neural timing: effects of convergence and time-windowing.

Authors:  Michael C Reed; Jacob J Blum; Colleen C Mitchell
Journal:  J Comput Neurosci       Date:  2002 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 1.621

8.  Facilitatory mechanisms shape selectivity for the rate and direction of FM sweeps in the inferior colliculus of the pallid bat.

Authors:  Anthony J Williams; Zoltan M Fuzessery
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2010-07-14       Impact factor: 2.714

9.  Subthreshold dendritic signal processing and coincidence detection in dentate gyrus granule cells.

Authors:  Christoph Schmidt-Hieber; Peter Jonas; Josef Bischofberger
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2007-08-01       Impact factor: 6.167

Review 10.  Neural networks a century after Cajal.

Authors:  Walter J Jermakowicz; Vivien A Casagrande
Journal:  Brain Res Rev       Date:  2007-07-13
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