Abstract

As recent advances in calcium sensing technologies facilitate simultaneously imaging action potentials in neuronal populations, complementary analytical tools must also be developed to maximize the utility of this experimental paradigm. Although the observations here are fluorescence movies, the signals of interest—spike trains and/or time varying intracellular calcium concentrations—are hidden. Inferring these hidden signals is often problematic due to noise, nonlinearities, slow imaging rate, and unknown biophysical parameters. We overcome these difficulties by developing sequential Monte Carlo methods (particle filters) based on biophysical models of spiking, calcium dynamics, and fluorescence. We show that even in simple cases, the particle filters outperform the optimal linear (i.e., Wiener) filter, both by obtaining better estimates and by providing error bars. We then relax a number of our model assumptions to incorporate nonlinear saturation of the fluorescence signal, as well external stimulus and spike history dependence (e.g., refractoriness) of the spike trains. Using both simulations and in vitro fluorescence observations, we demonstrate temporal superresolution by inferring when within a frame each spike occurs. Furthermore, the model parameters may be estimated using expectation maximization with only a very limited amount of data (e.g., ∼5–10 s or 5–40 spikes), without the requirement of any simultaneous electrophysiology or imaging experiments.

Highlights

  • Advances in the development of calcium indicators, delivery techniques, and microscopy technologies have facilitated imaging a wide array of preparations [1]

  • Our goal is to take the entire sequence of fluorescence observations, F1:T 1⁄4 [F1, ., FT], and infer the underlying spike train, n1:T

  • We developed a linear particle filter smoother (PFS) to perform optimal inference of the spike train

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Summary

Introduction

Advances in the development of calcium indicators, delivery techniques, and microscopy technologies have facilitated imaging a wide array of preparations [1]. Calcium sensitive organic dyes [2,3] have been targeted to populations of neurons both in vivo and in vitro using bulk loading [3,4,5] and electroporation [6,7]. In conjunction with the development of improved calcium indicators and loading techniques, the advent of 2-photon microscopy enables the visualization of neurons deep within scattering tissue [11,12,13,14]. The data collected from these experiments are fluorescence movies, the signals of interest are the precise spike times and/or the intracellular calcium concentrations, [Ca2þ], of the observable neurons

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