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Extracting information in spike time patterns with wavelets and information theory.

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journal contribution
posted on 2019-10-21, 13:18 authored by Vítor Lopes-dos-Santos, Stefano Panzeri, Christoph Kayser, Mathew E. Diamond, Rodrigo Quian Quiroga
We present a new method to assess the information carried by temporal patterns in spike trains. The method first performs a wavelet decomposition of the spike trains, then uses Shannon information to select a subset of coefficients carrying information, and finally assesses timing information in terms of decoding performance: the ability to identify the presented stimuli from spike train patterns. We show that the method allows: 1) a robust assessment of the information carried by spike time patterns even when this is distributed across multiple time scales and time points; 2) an effective denoising of the raster plots that improves the estimate of stimulus tuning of spike trains; and 3) an assessment of the information carried by temporally coordinated spikes across neurons. Using simulated data, we demonstrate that the Wavelet-Information (WI) method performs better and is more robust to spike time-jitter, background noise, and sample size than well-established approaches, such as principal component analysis, direct estimates of information from digitized spike trains, or a metric-based method. Furthermore, when applied to real spike trains from monkey auditory cortex and from rat barrel cortex, the WI method allows extracting larger amounts of spike timing information. Importantly, the fact that the WI method incorporates multiple time scales makes it robust to the choice of partly arbitrary parameters such as temporal resolution, response window length, number of response features considered, and the number of available trials. These results highlight the potential of the proposed method for accurate and objective assessments of how spike timing encodes information.

Funding

V. Lopes-dos-Santos was funded by the Science Without Borders program from the Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES) Foundation, Ministry of Education of Brazil. This work was supported by grants from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council and the Human Frontier Science Program. S. Panzeri acknowledges support from the SI-CODE European Union Future Emerging Technology (FET)-OpenFP7-284533 Project and from the Autonomous Province of Trento (Call “Grandi Progetti 2012,” Project “Characterizing and Improving Brain Mechanisms of Attention-ATTEND”).

History

Citation

Journal of Neurophysiology, 2015, 113 (3), pp. 1015-1033

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF LIFE SCIENCES/Biological Sciences/Neuroscience, Psychology and Behaviour

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Journal of Neurophysiology

Publisher

American Physiological Society

eissn

1522-1598

Copyright date

2015

Available date

2019-10-21

Publisher version

https://www.physiology.org/doi/full/10.1152/jn.00380.2014

Notes

A MATLAB implementation of the WI is available from http://www.le.ac.uk/csn/WI.

Language

en