Linear filtering and nonlinear interactions in direction-selective visual cortex neurons: A noise correlation analysis

2001 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 465-485 ◽  
Author(s):  
CURTIS L. BAKER

Spatial and temporal properties related to direction selectivity of both simple and complex type visual cortex neurons were assessed by cross-correlation analysis of their responses to random ternary white noise. This stimulus consisted of multiple randomly placed bars, each colored white, black, or gray with equal probability, which were rerandomized every 5–10 ms. A first-order cross-correlation analysis of a neuron's spike train with the spatiotemporal history of the stimulus provided an estimate of the neuron's linear spatiotemporal filtering properties. A nonlinear correlation analysis measured the amount of interaction for pair-wise combinations of bars as a function of their relative spatial and temporal separations. The spatiotemporal orientation of each of these functions was quantified using a “motion energy index” (MEI), which was compared to the neurons' direction selectivity measured with drifting sinewave gratings. Both first-order and nonlinear correlation plots usually showed s–t orientation whose sign was consistent with the neuron's direction preference; however, in many cases the MEI for first-order analysis was weak compared to that seen in the nonlinear interactions. The structures of the nonlinear interaction functions were also compared with predictions from a conventional model of direction selectivity based on a simple spatiotemporally oriented linear filter, followed by an intensive nonlinearity (“LN model”). These comparisons showed that some neurons' data agreed reasonably well with such a model, while others agreed poorly or not at all. Simulations of an alternative model which combines signals from idealized lagged and nonlagged front-end linear filters produce noise correlation results more like those seen in the neurophysiological data.

1993 ◽  
Vol 69 (1) ◽  
pp. 40-56 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Hata ◽  
T. Tsumoto ◽  
H. Sato ◽  
K. Hagihara ◽  
H. Tamura

1. To explore the functional development of local horizontal interactions in the primary visual cortex, we carried out cross-correlation analysis of spike trains recorded simultaneously from a pair of neurons separated horizontally by < 1 mm, in kittens ranging in age postnatally from the second to ninth week. 2. Significantly correlated firings were found in 87 pairs of cells among 423 pairs analyzed, and 77 pairs of them were classified into three types on the basis of their functional implications: 1) excitatory interactions, 2) inhibitory interactions, and 3) common inputs to both neurons of the pair from other sources. 3. Common inputs and excitatory linkage were observed even in animals at the second postnatal week, whereas inhibitory linkage was not seen before the fourth week of age. The probability of observing common inputs and inhibitory linkage increased during development, whereas that of excitatory linkage tended to decrease after the sixth week of age. 4. Significant correlation was rarely seen in pairs with horizontal separation > 600 microns in the seventh to ninth week. In the fourth to sixth week of age, however, approximately 30% of the pairs with horizontal separation between 600 and 800 microns were significantly correlated. 5. Cells that were not sensitive for orientation or that lacked a visual response were observed mainly before the sixth week of age. These cells tended to receive excitatory effects from and share common inputs with other orientation-sensitive cells that were located within the horizontal distance of 400 microns. 6. All three types of correlations were observed mostly in cell pairs with preferred orientations that differed < 45 degrees at all ages studied. In the fourth to sixth week, however, the similarity of orientation preference was not strict, and correlated firings were observed even in a pair with orthogonal orientation preferences; whereas in the seventh to ninth week the tuning became sharper. 7. These results suggest that functional interactions between cortical neurons exist but are much less specific with respect to horizontal separation and orientation preference before the sixth week of age, and these interactions become more specific so as to operate between neurons with similar orientation preferences in more restricted region after the seventh to ninth week of age and thus in adulthood.


Complexity ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Keqiang Dong ◽  
Xiaojie Gao

In this paper, we develop a new method to measure the nonlinear interactions between nonstationary time series based on the detrended cross-correlation coefficient analysis. We describe how a nonlinear interaction may be obtained by eliminating the influence of other variables on two simultaneous time series. By applying two artificially generated signals, we show that the new method is working reliably for determining the cross-correlation behavior of two signals. We also illustrate the application of this method in finance and aeroengine systems. These analyses suggest that the proposed measure, derived from the detrended cross-correlation coefficient analysis, may be used to remove the influence of other variables on the cross-correlation between two simultaneous time series.


2018 ◽  
Vol 941 ◽  
pp. 2104-2108
Author(s):  
Ren Zhou ◽  
Kento Mori ◽  
Hiroshi Ohtomo ◽  
Daisuke Yamashita ◽  
Hyun Woong Seo ◽  
...  

We analyzed fluctuations of interactions between low pressure reactive plasmas and nanoparticles formed in the plasmas, to shed light on origins of fluctuations of interactions and to control fluctuations in plasma processes. Spatiotemporal fluctuations of nanoparticle density develop not only in a linear way but also in a nonlinear way. The results suggest nonlinear interactions potentially induce spatial and temporal process fluctuations.


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