TopicNeuroscience

synchronous activity

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SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Bridging the gap between artificial models and cortical circuits

C. B. Currin
IST Austria
Nov 10, 2022

Artificial neural networks simplify complex biological circuits into tractable models for computational exploration and experimentation. However, the simplification of artificial models also undermines their applicability to real brain dynamics. Typical efforts to address this mismatch add complexity to increasingly unwieldy models. Here, we take a different approach; by reducing the complexity of a biological cortical culture, we aim to distil the essential factors of neuronal dynamics and plasticity. We leverage recent advances in growing neurons from human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) to analyse ex vivo cortical cultures with only two distinct excitatory and inhibitory neuron populations. Over 6 weeks of development, we record from thousands of neurons using high-density microelectrode arrays (HD-MEAs) that allow access to individual neurons and the broader population dynamics. We compare these dynamics to two-population artificial networks of single-compartment neurons with random sparse connections and show that they produce similar dynamics. Specifically, our model captures the firing and bursting statistics of the cultures. Moreover, tightly integrating models and cultures allows us to evaluate the impact of changing architectures over weeks of development, with and without external stimuli. Broadly, the use of simplified cortical cultures enables us to use the repertoire of theoretical neuroscience techniques established over the past decades on artificial network models. Our approach of deriving neural networks from human cells also allows us, for the first time, to directly compare neural dynamics of disease and control. We found that cultures e.g. from epilepsy patients tended to have increasingly more avalanches of synchronous activity over weeks of development, in contrast to the control cultures. Next, we will test possible interventions, in silico and in vitro, in a drive for personalised approaches to medical care. This work starts bridging an important theoretical-experimental neuroscience gap for advancing our understanding of mammalian neuron dynamics.

SeminarNeuroscience

Learning binds novel inputs into functional synaptic clusters via spinogenesis

Nathan Hedrick
UCSD
Mar 30, 2022

Learning is known to induce the formation of new dendritic spines, but despite decades of effort, the functional properties of new spines in vivo remain unknown. Here, using a combination of longitudinal in vivo 2-photon imaging of the glutamate reporter, iGluSnFR, and correlated electron microscopy (CLEM) of dendritic spines on the apical dendrites of L2/3 excitatory neurons in the motor cortex during motor learning, we describe a framework of new spines' formation, survival, and resulting function. Specifically, our data indicate that the potentiation of a subset of clustered, pre-existing spines showing task-related activity in early sessions of learning creates a micro-environment of plasticity within dendrites, wherein multiple filopodia sample the nearby neuropil, form connections with pre-existing boutons connected to allodendritic spines, and are then selected for survival based on co-activity with nearby task-related spines. Thus, the formation and survival of new spines is determined by the functional micro-environment of dendrites. After formation, new spines show preferential co-activation with nearby task-related spines. This synchronous activity is more specific to movements than activation of the individual spines in isolation, and further, is coincident with movements that are more similar to the learned pattern. Thus, new spines functionally engage with their parent clusters to signal the learned movement. Finally, by reconstructing the axons associated with new spines, we found that they synapse with axons previously unrepresented in these dendritic domains, suggesting that the strong local co-activity structure exhibited by new spines is likely not due to axon sharing. Thus, learning involves the binding of new information streams into functional synaptic clusters to subserve the learned behavior.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

NMC4 Short Talk: Novel population of synchronously active pyramidal cells in hippocampal area CA1

Dori Grijseels (they/them)
University of Sussex
Dec 2, 2021

Hippocampal pyramidal cells have been widely studied during locomotion, when theta oscillations are present, and during short wave ripples at rest, when replay takes place. However, we find a subset of pyramidal cells that are preferably active during rest, in the absence of theta oscillations and short wave ripples. We recorded these cells using two-photon imaging in dorsal CA1 of the hippocampus of mice, during a virtual reality object location recognition task. During locomotion, the cells show a similar level of activity as control cells, but their activity increases during rest, when this population of cells shows highly synchronous, oscillatory activity at a low frequency (0.1-0.4 Hz). In addition, during both locomotion and rest these cells show place coding, suggesting they may play a role in maintaining a representation of the current location, even when the animal is not moving. We performed simultaneous electrophysiological and calcium recordings, which showed a higher correlation of activity between the LFO and the hippocampal cells in the 0.1-0.4 Hz low frequency band during rest than during locomotion. However, the relationship between the LFO and calcium signals varied between electrodes, suggesting a localized effect. We used the Allen Brain Observatory Neuropixels Visual Coding dataset to further explore this. These data revealed localised low frequency oscillations in CA1 and DG during rest. Overall, we show a novel population of hippocampal cells, and a novel oscillatory band of activity in hippocampus during rest.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

NMC4 Short Talk: A theory for the population rate of adapting neurons disambiguates mean vs. variance-driven dynamics and explains log-normal response statistics

Laureline Logiaco (she/her)
Columbia University
Dec 2, 2021

Recently, the field of computational neuroscience has seen an explosion of the use of trained recurrent network models (RNNs) to model patterns of neural activity. These RNN models are typically characterized by tuned recurrent interactions between rate 'units' whose dynamics are governed by smooth, continuous differential equations. However, the response of biological single neurons is better described by all-or-none events - spikes - that are triggered in response to the processing of their synaptic input by the complex dynamics of their membrane. One line of research has attempted to resolve this discrepancy by linking the average firing probability of a population of simplified spiking neuron models to rate dynamics similar to those used for RNN units. However, challenges remain to account for complex temporal dependencies in the biological single neuron response and for the heterogeneity of synaptic input across the population. Here, we make progress by showing how to derive dynamic rate equations for a population of spiking neurons with multi-timescale adaptation properties - as this was shown to accurately model the response of biological neurons - while they receive independent time-varying inputs, leading to plausible asynchronous activity in the network. The resulting rate equations yield an insightful segregation of the population's response into dynamics that are driven by the mean signal received by the neural population, and dynamics driven by the variance of the input across neurons, with respective timescales that are in agreement with slice experiments. Further, these equations explain how input variability can shape log-normal instantaneous rate distributions across neurons, as observed in vivo. Our results help interpret properties of the neural population response and open the way to investigating whether the more biologically plausible and dynamically complex rate model we derive could provide useful inductive biases if used in an RNN to solve specific tasks.

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