TopicNeuroscience

dendritic inhibition

Content Overview
3Total items
2ePosters
1Seminar

Latest

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Deriving local synaptic learning rules for efficient representations in networks of spiking neurons

Viola Priesemann
Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization
Nov 2, 2021

How can neural networks learn to efficiently represent complex and high-dimensional inputs via local plasticity mechanisms? Classical models of representation learning assume that input weights are learned via pairwise Hebbian-like plasticity. Here, we show that pairwise Hebbian-like plasticity only works under specific requirements on neural dynamics and input statistics. To overcome these limitations, we derive from first principles a learning scheme based on voltage-dependent synaptic plasticity rules. Here, inhibition learns to locally balance excitatory input in individual dendritic compartments, and thereby can modulate excitatory synaptic plasticity to learn efficient representations. We demonstrate in simulations that this learning scheme works robustly even for complex, high-dimensional and correlated inputs. It also works in the presence of inhibitory transmission delays, where Hebbian-like plasticity typically fails. Our results draw a direct connection between dendritic excitatory-inhibitory balance and voltage-dependent synaptic plasticity as observed in vivo, and suggest that both are crucial for representation learning.

ePosterNeuroscience

Excessive dendritic inhibition in the prefrontal cortex of a mouse model of Down syndrome persists throughout development into adulthood

Javier Zorrilla de San Martin, Andrea Aguirre, Marie-Claude Potier, Alberto Bacci
ePosterNeuroscience

Environmental enrichment promotes sparse coding in hippocampus via increased dendritic inhibition

Ekaterina Verdiyan, Stylianos Kouvaros, Josef Bischofberger

FENS Forum 2024

dendritic inhibition coverage

3 items

ePoster2
Seminar1

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