Patterned perturbation of inhibition can reveal the dynamical structure of neural processing
File(s)Sadeh20.pdf (9.13 MB)
Accepted version
Author(s)
Sadeh, Sadra
Clopath, Claudia
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Perturbation of neuronal activity is key to understanding the brain's functional properties, however, intervention studies typically perturb neurons in a nonspecific manner. Recent optogenetics techniques have enabled patterned perturbations, in which specific patterns of activity can be invoked in identified target neurons to reveal more specific cortical function. Here, we argue that patterned perturbation of neurons is in fact necessary to reveal the specific dynamics of inhibitory stabilization, emerging in cortical networks with strong excitatory and inhibitory functional subnetworks, as recently reported in mouse visual cortex. We propose a specific perturbative signature of these networks and investigate how this can be measured under different experimental conditions. Functionally, rapid spontaneous transitions between selective ensembles of neurons emerge in such networks, consistent with experimental results. Our study outlines the dynamical and functional properties of feature-specific inhibitory-stabilized networks, and suggests experimental protocols that can be used to detect them in the intact cortex.
Date Issued
2020-02-19
Date Acceptance
2020-02-19
Citation
eLife, 2020, 9
ISSN
2050-084X
Publisher
eLife Sciences Publications Ltd
Journal / Book Title
eLife
Volume
9
Copyright Statement
© 2020, Sadeh & Clopath. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License permitting unrestricted use and redistribution provided that the original author and source are credited.
Sponsor
Wellcome Trust
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Cou
Simons Foundation
Grant Number
200790/Z/16/Z
ORCA 64155 (BB/N013956/1)
Award ID:564408
Subjects
mouse
neuroscience
0601 Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Publication Status
Published
Article Number
ARTN e52757