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Interacting Synapses Stabilise Both

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Seminar✓ Recording AvailableNeuroscience

Interacting synapses stabilise both learning and neuronal dynamics in biological networks

Tim Vogels

IST Austria

Schedule
Wednesday, March 3, 2021

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Wednesday, March 3, 2021

8:30 PM Africa/Johannesburg

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Host: NERV

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NERV

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70.00 minutes

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Abstract

Distinct synapses influence one another when they undergo changes, with unclear consequences for neuronal dynamics and function. Here we show that synapses can interact such that excitatory currents are naturally normalised and balanced by inhibitory inputs. This happens when classical spike-timing dependent synaptic plasticity rules are extended by additional mechanisms that incorporate the influence of neighbouring synaptic currents and regulate the amplitude of efficacy changes accordingly. The resulting control of excitatory plasticity by inhibitory activation, and vice versa, gives rise to quick and long-lasting memories as seen experimentally in receptive field plasticity paradigms. In models with additional dendritic structure, we observe experimentally reported clustering of co-active synapses that depends on initial connectivity and morphology. Finally, in recurrent neural networks, rich and stable dynamics with high input sensitivity emerge, providing transient activity that resembles recordings from the motor cortex. Our model provides a general framework for codependent plasticity that frames individual synaptic modifications in the context of population-wide changes, allowing us to connect micro-level physiology with behavioural phenomena.

Topics

co-active synapsesdendritic structureexcitatory inputsinhibitory inputsmotor cortexneuronal dynamicsreceptive field plasticityrecurrent neural networkssynaptic plasticity

About the Speaker

Tim Vogels

IST Austria

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

vogelslab.org

@TPVogels

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twitter.com/TPVogels

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