Several experiments have shown that the stimulation of a single neuron in the cortex can influence the local network activity and even the behavior of an animal. From the theoretical point of view, it is not clear how stimulating a single cell in a cortical network can evoke a statistically significant change in the activity of a large population. Our previous study considered a random network of integrate-and-fire neurons and proposed a way of detecting the stimulation of a single neuron in the activity of a local network: a threshold detector biased toward a specific subset of neurons. Here, we revisit this model and extend it by introducing a second network acting as a readout. In the simplest scenario, the readout consists of a collection of integrate-and-fire neurons with no recurrent connections. In this case, the ability to detect the stimulus does not improve. However, a readout network with both feed-forward and local recurrent inhibition permits detection with a very small bias, if compared to the readout scheme introduced previously. The crucial role of inhibition is to reduce global input cross correlations, the main factor limiting detectability. Finally, we show that this result is robust if recurrent excitatory connections are included or if a different kind of readout bias (in the synaptic amplitudes instead of connection probability) is used.

Detecting single-cell stimulation in a large network of integrate-and-fire neurons

Bernardi D.
;
2019

Abstract

Several experiments have shown that the stimulation of a single neuron in the cortex can influence the local network activity and even the behavior of an animal. From the theoretical point of view, it is not clear how stimulating a single cell in a cortical network can evoke a statistically significant change in the activity of a large population. Our previous study considered a random network of integrate-and-fire neurons and proposed a way of detecting the stimulation of a single neuron in the activity of a local network: a threshold detector biased toward a specific subset of neurons. Here, we revisit this model and extend it by introducing a second network acting as a readout. In the simplest scenario, the readout consists of a collection of integrate-and-fire neurons with no recurrent connections. In this case, the ability to detect the stimulus does not improve. However, a readout network with both feed-forward and local recurrent inhibition permits detection with a very small bias, if compared to the readout scheme introduced previously. The crucial role of inhibition is to reduce global input cross correlations, the main factor limiting detectability. Finally, we show that this result is robust if recurrent excitatory connections are included or if a different kind of readout bias (in the synaptic amplitudes instead of connection probability) is used.
2019
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11577/3508073
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