Abstract

Throughout the central nervous system, the timescale over which pairs of neural spike trains are correlated is shaped by stimulus structure and behavioral context. Such shaping is thought to underlie important changes in the neural code, but the neural circuitry responsible is largely unknown. In this study, we investigate a stimulus-induced shaping of pairwise spike train correlations in the electrosensory system of weakly electric fish. Simultaneous single unit recordings of principal electrosensory cells show that an increase in the spatial extent of stimuli increases correlations at short () timescales while simultaneously reducing correlations at long () timescales. A spiking network model of the first two stages of electrosensory processing replicates this correlation shaping, under the assumptions that spatially broad stimuli both saturate feedforward afferent input and recruit an open-loop inhibitory feedback pathway. Our model predictions are experimentally verified using both the natural heterogeneity of the electrosensory system and pharmacological blockade of descending feedback projections. For weak stimuli, linear response analysis of the spiking network shows that the reduction of long timescale correlation for spatially broad stimuli is similar to correlation cancellation mechanisms previously suggested to be operative in mammalian cortex. The mechanism for correlation shaping supports population-level filtering of irrelevant distractor stimuli, thereby enhancing the population response to relevant prey and conspecific communication inputs.

Highlights

  • There is a clear link between the combined activity of neurons and specific neural computations [1,2]

  • How neural wiring supports this dependence remains an open question. We explore this general phenomenon using weakly electric fish, which possess a sensory system that detects electric field modulations produced by the surrounding environment

  • These animals’ nervous systems are tuned to detect the difference between spatially compact prey inputs and spatially broad communication calls from other fish. We discover that these two classes of stimuli differentially control the synchrony between pairs of electrosensory neurons. We predict that this modulation is related to feedforward and feedback neural pathways in the electrosensory system, and we verify this prediction with experiments

Read more

Summary

Introduction

There is a clear link between the combined activity of neurons and specific neural computations [1,2]. A common observation from population recordings is that the correlation between the activities of pairs of neurons can be modulated – for instance, by the spatiotemporal structure of stimuli [3,4], the perceptual state of the subject [5,6], or the spatial focus of attention [7,8,9]. One complication is that spike train correlations reflect common activity that may be measured at different timescales, ranging from a few (synchrony) to hundreds of milliseconds (covariation of firing rates). We use a combination of in vivo recordings and computational modeling of electrosensory neurons to study how the spatial structure of a stimulus shapes the correlation of primary sensory neurons

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call