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Seminar✓ Recording AvailableNeuroscience

Mean-field models for finite-size populations of spiking neurons

Tilo Schwalger

Dr.

TU Berlin

Schedule
Monday, June 8, 2020

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Schedule

Monday, June 8, 2020

1:00 PM Asia/Jerusalem

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Host: NeuroMath

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Recording provided by the organiser.

Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Original Event

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Host

NeuroMath

Duration

70 minutes

Abstract

Firing-rate (FR) or neural-mass models are widely used for studying computations performed by neural populations. Despite their success, classical firing-rate models do not capture spike timing effects on the microscopic level such as spike synchronization and are difficult to link to spiking data in experimental recordings. For large neuronal populations, the gap between the spiking neuron dynamics on the microscopic level and coarse-grained FR models on the population level can be bridged by mean-field theory formally valid for infinitely many neurons. It remains however challenging to extend the resulting mean-field models to finite-size populations with biologically realistic neuron numbers per cell type (mesoscopic scale). In this talk, I present a mathematical framework for mesoscopic populations of generalized integrate-and-fire neuron models that accounts for fluctuations caused by the finite number of neurons. To this end, I will introduce the refractory density method for quasi-renewal processes and show how this method can be generalized to finite-size populations. To demonstrate the flexibility of this approach, I will show how synaptic short-term plasticity can be incorporated in the mesoscopic mean-field framework. On the other hand, the framework permits a systematic reduction to low-dimensional FR equations using the eigenfunction method. Our modeling framework enables a re-examination of classical FR models in computational neuroscience under biophysically more realistic conditions.

Topics

firing-rate modelsintegrate-and-firemathmean-field modelsmesoscopic populationsneural-mass modelsrefractory density methodspike synchronizationspiking neuronssynaptic short-term plasticitytheory

About the Speaker

Tilo Schwalger

Dr.

TU Berlin

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

page.math.tu-berlin.de/~schwalge/

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