Abstract

Measurement of the local field potential (LFP) has become routine for assessment of neuronal activity in neuroscientific and clinical applications, but its interpretation remains nontrivial. Understanding the LFP requires accounting for both anatomical and electrophysiological features of neurons near the recording electrode as well as the entire large-scale neuronal circuitry generating synaptic input to these cells. The direct simulation of LFPs in biophysically detailed network models is computationally daunting. Here, we instead propose a hybrid modeling scheme combining the efficiency of simplified point-neuron network models (Fig. ​(Fig.1A)1A) with the biophysical principles underlying LFP generation by multicompartment neurons [1] (Fig ​(Fig1C).1C). We apply this scheme to a model representing a full-scale cortical network under about 1 square millimeter surface of cat primary visual cortex [2] (Fig. 1A,B) with layer-specific connectivity [3] to predict laminar LFPs (Fig. ​(Fig.1D)1D) for different network states, assess the relative contribution of local neuron populations to the LFP, investigate the role of input correlations and neuron density, and validate linear LFP predictions based on population firing rates. The hybrid scheme is accompanied by our open-source software, hybridLFPy (github.com/espenhgn/hybridLFPy). Figure 1 Overview of the hybrid scheme for modeling LFP generated by a cortical network model. A Sketch of point-neuron network model [1]. B Spikes of point neurons in the network for spontaneous and evoked activity. C Populations of multi-compartment neurons ...

Highlights

  • Measurement of the local field potential (LFP) has become routine for assessment of neuronal activity in neuroscientific and clinical applications, but its interpretation remains nontrivial

  • * Correspondence: e.hagen@fz-juelich.de 1Inst. of Neuroscience and Medicine (INM-6) and Inst. for Advanced Simulation (IAS-6), Jülich Research Center and Juelich Aachen Research Alliance (JARA), Jülich, 52425, Germany Full list of author information is available at the end of the article

  • (Fig. 1D) for different network states, assess the relative contribution of local neuron populations to the LFP, investigate the role of input correlations and neuron density, and validate linear LFP predictions based on population firing rates

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Summary

Introduction

Measurement of the local field potential (LFP) has become routine for assessment of neuronal activity in neuroscientific and clinical applications, but its interpretation remains nontrivial. For Advanced Simulation (IAS-6), Jülich Research Center and JARA, Jülich, 52425, Germany Full list of author information is available at the end of the article

Results
Conclusion

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