{"title":"Interactions between Intrinsic and Stimulus-Evoked Activity in Recurrent Neural Networks","authors":"L. Abbott, Kanaka Rajan, H. Sompolinsky","doi":"10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195393798.003.0004","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Trial-to-trial variability is an essential feature of neural responses, but its source is a subject of active debate. Response variability (Mast and Victor, 1991; Arieli et al., 1995 & 1996; Anderson et al., 2000 & 2001; Kenet et al., 2003; Petersen et al., 2003a & b; Fiser, Chiu and Weliky, 2004; MacLean et al., 2005; Yuste et al., 2005; Vincent et al., 2007) is often treated as random noise, generated either by other brain areas, or by stochastic processes within the circuitry being studied. We call such sources of variability external to stress the independence of this form of noise from activity driven by the stimulus. Variability can also be generated internally by the same network dynamics that generates responses to a stimulus. How can we distinguish between external and internal sources of response variability? Here we show that internal sources of variability interact nonlinearly with stimulus-induced activity, and this interaction yields a suppression of noise in the evoked state. This provides a theoretical basis and potential mechanism for the experimental observation that, in many brain areas, stimuli cause significant suppression of neuronal variability (Werner and Mountcastle, 1963; Fortier, Smith and Kalaska, 1993; Anderson et al., 2000; Friedrich and Laurent, 2004; Churchland et al., 2006; Finn, Priebe and Ferster, 2007; Mitchell, Sundberg and Reynolds, 2007; Churchland et al., 2009). The combined theoretical and experimental results suggest that internally generated activity is a significant contributor to response variability in neural circuits.","PeriodicalId":298664,"journal":{"name":"arXiv: Neurons and Cognition","volume":"3 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2009-12-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"77","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"arXiv: Neurons and Cognition","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195393798.003.0004","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 77
Abstract
Trial-to-trial variability is an essential feature of neural responses, but its source is a subject of active debate. Response variability (Mast and Victor, 1991; Arieli et al., 1995 & 1996; Anderson et al., 2000 & 2001; Kenet et al., 2003; Petersen et al., 2003a & b; Fiser, Chiu and Weliky, 2004; MacLean et al., 2005; Yuste et al., 2005; Vincent et al., 2007) is often treated as random noise, generated either by other brain areas, or by stochastic processes within the circuitry being studied. We call such sources of variability external to stress the independence of this form of noise from activity driven by the stimulus. Variability can also be generated internally by the same network dynamics that generates responses to a stimulus. How can we distinguish between external and internal sources of response variability? Here we show that internal sources of variability interact nonlinearly with stimulus-induced activity, and this interaction yields a suppression of noise in the evoked state. This provides a theoretical basis and potential mechanism for the experimental observation that, in many brain areas, stimuli cause significant suppression of neuronal variability (Werner and Mountcastle, 1963; Fortier, Smith and Kalaska, 1993; Anderson et al., 2000; Friedrich and Laurent, 2004; Churchland et al., 2006; Finn, Priebe and Ferster, 2007; Mitchell, Sundberg and Reynolds, 2007; Churchland et al., 2009). The combined theoretical and experimental results suggest that internally generated activity is a significant contributor to response variability in neural circuits.
试验对试验的可变性是神经反应的一个基本特征,但其来源是一个积极辩论的主题。响应变异性(Mast and Victor, 1991;Arieli et al., 1995 & 1996;Anderson et al., 2000 & 2001;Kenet et al., 2003;Petersen et al., 2003a & b;Fiser, Chiu and Weliky, 2004;MacLean et al., 2005;Yuste et al., 2005;Vincent et al., 2007)通常被视为随机噪声,由其他大脑区域产生,或由正在研究的电路中的随机过程产生。我们把这种变异性的来源称为外部,以强调这种形式的噪声与由刺激驱动的活动的独立性。可变性也可以通过产生对刺激的反应的相同网络动态在内部产生。我们如何区分反应可变性的外部和内部来源?在这里,我们表明内部变异性源与刺激诱导的活动非线性相互作用,这种相互作用在诱发状态下产生噪声抑制。这为实验观察提供了理论基础和潜在机制,即在许多大脑区域,刺激会导致神经元变异性的显著抑制(Werner and Mountcastle, 1963;史密斯和卡拉斯卡,1993;Anderson et al., 2000;Friedrich and Laurent, 2004;Churchland et al., 2006;Finn, Priebe and Ferster, 2007;Mitchell, Sundberg and Reynolds, 2007;Churchland et al., 2009)。结合理论和实验结果表明,内部产生的活动是神经回路反应变异性的重要贡献者。