scholarly journals Cortical correlation structure of aperiodic neuronal population activity

NeuroImage ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 118672
Author(s):  
Andrea Ibarra Chaoul ◽  
Markus Siegel
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Ibarra Chaoul ◽  
Markus Siegel

AbstractElectrophysiological population signals contain oscillatory and fractal (1/frequency) components. So far research has largely focused on oscillatory activity and only recently interest in fractal population activity has gained momentum. Accordingly, while the cortical correlation structure of oscillatory population activity has been characterized, little is known about the correlation of fractal neuronal activity. To address this, we investigated fractal neuronal population activity in the human brain using resting-state magnetoencephalography (MEG). We combined source-analysis, signal orthogonalization and irregular-resampling auto-spectral analysis (IRASA) to systematically characterize the cortical distribution and correlation of fractal neuronal activity. We found that fractal population activity is robustly correlated across the cortex and that this correlation is spatially well structured. Furthermore, we found that the cortical correlation structure of fractal activity is similar but distinct from the correlation structure of oscillatory neuronal activity. Anterior cortical regions showed the strongest differences between oscillatory and fractal correlation patterns. Our results suggest that correlations of fractal population activity serve as robust markers of cortical network interactions. Furthermore, our results show that fractal and oscillatory signal components provide non-redundant information about large-scale neuronal correlations. This may reflect at least partly distinct neuronal mechanisms underlying and reflected by oscillatory and fractal neuronal population activity.


1998 ◽  
Vol 79 (2) ◽  
pp. 1017-1044 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kechen Zhang ◽  
Iris Ginzburg ◽  
Bruce L. McNaughton ◽  
Terrence J. Sejnowski

Zhang, Kechen, Iris Ginzburg, Bruce L. McNaughton, and Terrence J. Sejnowski. Interpreting neuronal population activity by reconstruction: unified framework with application to hippocampal place cells. J. Neurophysiol. 79: 1017–1044, 1998. Physical variables such as the orientation of a line in the visual field or the location of the body in space are coded as activity levels in populations of neurons. Reconstruction or decoding is an inverse problem in which the physical variables are estimated from observed neural activity. Reconstruction is useful first in quantifying how much information about the physical variables is present in the population and, second, in providing insight into how the brain might use distributed representations in solving related computational problems such as visual object recognition and spatial navigation. Two classes of reconstruction methods, namely, probabilistic or Bayesian methods and basis function methods, are discussed. They include important existing methods as special cases, such as population vector coding, optimal linear estimation, and template matching. As a representative example for the reconstruction problem, different methods were applied to multi-electrode spike train data from hippocampal place cells in freely moving rats. The reconstruction accuracy of the trajectories of the rats was compared for the different methods. Bayesian methods were especially accurate when a continuity constraint was enforced, and the best errors were within a factor of two of the information-theoretic limit on how accurate any reconstruction can be and were comparable with the intrinsic experimental errors in position tracking. In addition, the reconstruction analysis uncovered some interesting aspects of place cell activity, such as the tendency for erratic jumps of the reconstructed trajectory when the animal stopped running. In general, the theoretical values of the minimal achievable reconstruction errors quantify how accurately a physical variable is encoded in the neuronal population in the sense of mean square error, regardless of the method used for reading out the information. One related result is that the theoretical accuracy is independent of the width of the Gaussian tuning function only in two dimensions. Finally, all the reconstruction methods considered in this paper can be implemented by a unified neural network architecture, which the brain feasibly could use to solve related problems.


2010 ◽  
Vol 11 (S1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Noelia Montejo ◽  
Jean-Luc Blanc ◽  
Yann Mahnoun ◽  
Jean-Michel Brezun ◽  
Nicolas Catz ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 44 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rainer W. Friedrich ◽  
Adrian A. Wanner

The dense reconstruction of neuronal wiring diagrams from volumetric electron microscopy data has the potential to generate fundamentally new insights into mechanisms of information processing and storage in neuronal circuits. Zebrafish provide unique opportunities for dynamical connectomics approaches that combine reconstructions of wiring diagrams with measurements of neuronal population activity and behavior. Such approaches have the power to reveal higher-order structure in wiring diagrams that cannot be detected by sparse sampling of connectivity and that is essential for neuronal computations. In the brain stem, recurrently connected neuronal modules were identified that can account for slow, low-dimensional dynamics in an integrator circuit. In the spinal cord, connectivity specifies functional differences between premotor interneurons. In the olfactory bulb, tuning-dependent connectivity implements a whitening transformation that is based on the selective suppression of responses to overrepresented stimulus features. These findings illustrate the potential of dynamical connectomics in zebrafish to analyze the circuit mechanisms underlying higher-order neuronal computations. Expected final online publication date for the Annual Review of Neuroscience, Volume 44 is July 2021. Please see http://www.annualreviews.org/page/journal/pubdates for revised estimates.


2002 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 744-752 ◽  
Author(s):  
Irina A. Erchova ◽  
Mikhail A. Lebedev ◽  
Mathew E. Diamond

PLoS ONE ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. e0153154 ◽  
Author(s):  
Corey J. Keller ◽  
Christopher Chen ◽  
Fred A. Lado ◽  
Kamran Khodakhah

2006 ◽  
Vol 18 (7) ◽  
pp. 1555-1576 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcelo A. Montemurro ◽  
Stefano Panzeri

We study the relationship between the accuracy of a large neuronal population in encoding periodic sensory stimuli and the width of the tuning curves of individual neurons in the population. By using general simple models of population activity, we show that when considering one or two periodic stimulus features, a narrow tuning width provides better population encoding accuracy. When encoding more than two periodic stimulus features, the information conveyed by the population is instead maximal for finite values of the tuning width. These optimal values are only weakly dependent on model parameters and are similar to the width of tuning to orientation ormotion direction of real visual cortical neurons. A very large tuning width leads to poor encoding accuracy, whatever the number of stimulus features encoded. Thus, optimal coding of periodic stimuli is different from that of nonperiodic stimuli, which, as shown in previous studies, would require infinitely large tuning widths when coding more than two stimulus features.


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