利用潜在变量模型描述大脑皮层神经元群共享变异性的非线性结构。

Neurons, behavior, data analysis, and theory Pub Date : 2019-01-01 Epub Date: 2019-04-27
Matthew R Whiteway, Karolina Socha, Vincent Bonin, Daniel A Butts
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引用次数: 0

摘要

感觉神经元对重复出现的相同刺激往往会产生不同的反应,这会大大降低这些反应所包含的刺激信息。如果许多神经元之间共享变异性,原则上这种信息可以得到保留,但这取决于共享变异性的结构及其与群体水平的感觉编码之间的关系。神经活动中这种共享变异性的结构可以用潜在变量模型来描述,不过迄今为止,这些模型通常是在限制性数学假设条件下使用的,例如假设潜在变量和神经活动之间存在线性变换。在此,我们介绍两种用于分析大规模神经记录的非线性潜变量模型。首先,我们提出了一种通用的非线性潜变量模型,该模型与单个神经元的刺激调谐特性无关,因此非常适合探索调谐特性不明确的神经群。这就激发了第二类模型--广义仿射模型--的出现,它能同时确定每个神经元的刺激选择性和一组潜在变量,这些变量能以加法和乘法的方式调节这些刺激驱动的反应。虽然这些方法可以检测出共享神经变异性中非常普遍的非线性关系,但我们发现,在麻醉的初级视觉皮层(V1)中记录的神经活动用单一的加法和单一的乘法潜变量(即 "仿射模型")来描述最为合适。与此相反,将相同的模型应用于清醒猕猴前额叶皮层的记录时,却发现了更普遍的非线性因素,从而紧凑地描述了群体反应的变异性。这些结果证明了非线性潜变量模型如何用于描述群体变异性,并表明在不同实验条件下研究不同脑区需要一系列方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Characterizing the nonlinear structure of shared variability in cortical neuron populations using latent variable models.

Sensory neurons often have variable responses to repeated presentations of the same stimulus, which can significantly degrade the stimulus information contained in those responses. This information can in principle be preserved if variability is shared across many neurons, but depends on the structure of the shared variability and its relationship to sensory encoding at the population level. The structure of this shared variability in neural activity can be characterized by latent variable models, although they have thus far typically been used under restrictive mathematical assumptions, such as assuming linear transformations between the latent variables and neural activity. Here we introduce two nonlinear latent variable models for analyzing large-scale neural recordings. We first present a general nonlinear latent variable model that is agnostic to the stimulus tuning properties of the individual neurons, and is hence well suited for exploring neural populations whose tuning properties are not well characterized. This motivates a second class of model, the Generalized Affine Model, which simultaneously determines each neuron's stimulus selectivity and a set of latent variables that modulate these stimulus-driven responses both additively and multiplicatively. While these approaches can detect very general nonlinear relationships in shared neural variability, we find that neural activity recorded in anesthetized primary visual cortex (V1) is best described by a single additive and single multiplicative latent variable, i.e., an "affine model". In contrast, application of the same models to recordings in awake macaque prefrontal cortex discover more general nonlinearities to compactly describe the population response variability. These results thus demonstrate how nonlinear latent variable models can be used to describe population variability, and suggest that a range of methods is necessary to study different brain regions under different experimental conditions.

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