一种新的、基于抖动的检测和测量脉冲同步和量化时间发射精度的方法。

Ariel Agmon
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引用次数: 22

摘要

背景:精确的脉冲同步,在毫秒甚至亚毫秒的时间尺度,已经报道在不同的大脑区域,但其神经生物学意义和潜在的机制仍然未知或有争议。研究这些问题是复杂的,缺乏一个有效的,良好的标准化和稳健的指标来量化同步。以前使用的同步测量通常是不正确的归一化,因此不能在不同的实验条件之间进行比较,对放电速率的变化或两个神经元之间的放电速率差异敏感,和/或依赖于放电速率平稳性和泊松统计的站不住脚的假设。我在这里描述一种新的度量,基于抖动的同步指数(JBSI),它克服了这些问题。结果与讨论:JBSI方法是在引入虚拟尖峰抖动的基础上实现的。虽然以前的jitter方法实现只使用它来检测同步,但JBSI方法还可以量化同步。以前的抖动方法使用计算密集的蒙特卡罗模拟来生成代理尖峰序列,而JBSI是分析计算的。JBSI方法不假设任何特定的放电模型,也不需要将脉冲序列锁定在重复的外部刺激上。JBSI可以假设从1(最大可能的同步)到-1(最小可能的同步)的值,因此可以适当地规范化。通过引入可控脉冲重合的模拟泊松脉冲序列,我证明了JBSI是脉冲重合率的线性度量,与两个神经元之间的平均发射频率或发射频率差无关,并且对两个神经元的发射速率的共调制不敏感。相反,一些常用的同步索引在其中一个或多个场景下会失败。我还演示了如何使用JBSI来估计系统中的尖峰定时精度。结论:JBSI是一种概念简单且计算效率高的方法,可用于计算发射同步的统计显著性,将同步量化为一种归一化良好的指标,并估计系统中的时间精度程度。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

A novel, jitter-based method for detecting and measuring spike synchrony and quantifying temporal firing precision.

A novel, jitter-based method for detecting and measuring spike synchrony and quantifying temporal firing precision.

A novel, jitter-based method for detecting and measuring spike synchrony and quantifying temporal firing precision.

A novel, jitter-based method for detecting and measuring spike synchrony and quantifying temporal firing precision.

Background: Precise spike synchrony, at the millisecond or even sub-millisecond time scale, has been reported in different brain areas, but its neurobiological meaning and its underlying mechanisms remain unknown or controversial. Studying these questions is complicated by the lack of a validated, well-normalized and robust index for quantifying synchrony. Previously used measures of synchrony are often improperly normalized and thereby are not comparable between different experimental conditions, are sensitive to variations in firing rate or to the firing rate differential between the two neurons, and/or rely on untenable assumptions of firing rate stationarity and Poisson statistics. I describe here a novel measure, the Jitter-Based Synchrony Index (JBSI), that overcomes these issues.

Results and discussion: The JBSI method is based on the introduction of virtual spike jitter. While previous implementations of the jitter method used it only to detect synchrony, the JBSI method also quantifies synchrony. Previous implementations of the jitter method used computationally intensive Monte Carlo simulations to generate surrogate spike trains, whereas the JBSI is computed analytically. The JBSI method does not assume any specific firing model, and does not require that the spike trains be locked to a repeating external stimulus. The JBSI can assume values from 1 (maximal possible synchrony) to -1 (minimal possible synchrony) and is therefore properly normalized. Using simulated Poisson spike trains with introduced controlled spike coincidences, I demonstrate that the JBSI is a linear measure of the spike coincidence rate, is independent of the mean firing frequency or the firing frequency differential between the two neurons, and is not sensitive to co-modulations in the firing rates of the two neurons. In contrast, several commonly used synchrony indices fail under one or more of these scenarios. I also demonstrate how the JBSI can be used to estimate the spike timing precision in the system.

Conclusions: The JBSI is a conceptually simple and computationally efficient method that can be used to compute the statistical significance of firing synchrony, to quantify synchrony as a well-normalized index, and to estimate the degree of temporal precision in the system.

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