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1.
Cell ; 176(4): 844-855.e15, 2019 02 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30712870

RESUMEN

In developing organisms, spatially prescribed cell identities are thought to be determined by the expression levels of multiple genes. Quantitative tests of this idea, however, require a theoretical framework capable of exposing the rules and precision of cell specification over developmental time. We use the gap gene network in the early fly embryo as an example to show how expression levels of the four gap genes can be jointly decoded into an optimal specification of position with 1% accuracy. The decoder correctly predicts, with no free parameters, the dynamics of pair-rule expression patterns at different developmental time points and in various mutant backgrounds. Precise cellular identities are thus available at the earliest stages of development, contrasting the prevailing view of positional information being slowly refined across successive layers of the patterning network. Our results suggest that developmental enhancers closely approximate a mathematically optimal decoding strategy.


Asunto(s)
Proteínas Activadoras de GTPasa/genética , Regulación del Desarrollo de la Expresión Génica/genética , Redes Reguladoras de Genes/genética , Animales , Tipificación del Cuerpo/genética , Diferenciación Celular/genética , Proteínas de Drosophila/genética , Proteínas de Drosophila/metabolismo , Drosophila melanogaster/genética , Drosophila melanogaster/metabolismo , Embrión no Mamífero/metabolismo , Desarrollo Embrionario/genética , Proteínas Activadoras de GTPasa/metabolismo , Regulación del Desarrollo de la Expresión Génica/fisiología , Modelos Genéticos , Factores de Transcripción/metabolismo
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 121(23): e2322326121, 2024 Jun 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38819997

RESUMEN

A key feature of many developmental systems is their ability to self-organize spatial patterns of functionally distinct cell fates. To ensure proper biological function, such patterns must be established reproducibly, by controlling and even harnessing intrinsic and extrinsic fluctuations. While the relevant molecular processes are increasingly well understood, we lack a principled framework to quantify the performance of such stochastic self-organizing systems. To that end, we introduce an information-theoretic measure for self-organized fate specification during embryonic development. We show that the proposed measure assesses the total information content of fate patterns and decomposes it into interpretable contributions corresponding to the positional and correlational information. By optimizing the proposed measure, our framework provides a normative theory for developmental circuits, which we demonstrate on lateral inhibition, cell type proportioning, and reaction-diffusion models of self-organization. This paves a way toward a classification of developmental systems based on a common information-theoretic language, thereby organizing the zoo of implicated chemical and mechanical signaling processes.


Asunto(s)
Modelos Biológicos , Animales , Desarrollo Embrionario
3.
PLoS Biol ; 20(12): e3001889, 2022 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36542662

RESUMEN

Activity of sensory neurons is driven not only by external stimuli but also by feedback signals from higher brain areas. Attention is one particularly important internal signal whose presumed role is to modulate sensory representations such that they only encode information currently relevant to the organism at minimal cost. This hypothesis has, however, not yet been expressed in a normative computational framework. Here, by building on normative principles of probabilistic inference and efficient coding, we developed a model of dynamic population coding in the visual cortex. By continuously adapting the sensory code to changing demands of the perceptual observer, an attention-like modulation emerges. This modulation can dramatically reduce the amount of neural activity without deteriorating the accuracy of task-specific inferences. Our results suggest that a range of seemingly disparate cortical phenomena such as intrinsic gain modulation, attention-related tuning modulation, and response variability could be manifestations of the same underlying principles, which combine efficient sensory coding with optimal probabilistic inference in dynamic environments.


Asunto(s)
Atención , Corteza Visual , Atención/fisiología , Retroalimentación , Células Receptoras Sensoriales/fisiología , Corteza Visual/fisiología
4.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(36): e2123152119, 2022 09 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36037343

RESUMEN

Selection accumulates information in the genome-it guides stochastically evolving populations toward states (genotype frequencies) that would be unlikely under neutrality. This can be quantified as the Kullback-Leibler (KL) divergence between the actual distribution of genotype frequencies and the corresponding neutral distribution. First, we show that this population-level information sets an upper bound on the information at the level of genotype and phenotype, limiting how precisely they can be specified by selection. Next, we study how the accumulation and maintenance of information is limited by the cost of selection, measured as the genetic load or the relative fitness variance, both of which we connect to the control-theoretic KL cost of control. The information accumulation rate is upper bounded by the population size times the cost of selection. This bound is very general, and applies across models (Wright-Fisher, Moran, diffusion) and to arbitrary forms of selection, mutation, and recombination. Finally, the cost of maintaining information depends on how it is encoded: Specifying a single allele out of two is expensive, but one bit encoded among many weakly specified loci (as in a polygenic trait) is cheap.


Asunto(s)
Evolución Biológica , Modelos Genéticos , Selección Genética , Alelos , Frecuencia de los Genes , Genética de Población
5.
J Neurosci ; 43(48): 8140-8156, 2023 11 29.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37758476

RESUMEN

Although much is known about how single neurons in the hippocampus represent an animal's position, how circuit interactions contribute to spatial coding is less well understood. Using a novel statistical estimator and theoretical modeling, both developed in the framework of maximum entropy models, we reveal highly structured CA1 cell-cell interactions in male rats during open field exploration. The statistics of these interactions depend on whether the animal is in a familiar or novel environment. In both conditions the circuit interactions optimize the encoding of spatial information, but for regimes that differ in the informativeness of their spatial inputs. This structure facilitates linear decodability, making the information easy to read out by downstream circuits. Overall, our findings suggest that the efficient coding hypothesis is not only applicable to individual neuron properties in the sensory periphery, but also to neural interactions in the central brain.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Local circuit interactions play a key role in neural computation and are dynamically shaped by experience. However, measuring and assessing their effects during behavior remains a challenge. Here, we combine techniques from statistical physics and machine learning to develop new tools for determining the effects of local network interactions on neural population activity. This approach reveals highly structured local interactions between hippocampal neurons, which make the neural code more precise and easier to read out by downstream circuits, across different levels of experience. More generally, the novel combination of theory and data analysis in the framework of maximum entropy models enables traditional neural coding questions to be asked in naturalistic settings.


Asunto(s)
Región CA1 Hipocampal , Hipocampo , Ratas , Masculino , Animales , Región CA1 Hipocampal/fisiología , Neuronas/fisiología , Red Nerviosa/fisiología
6.
Development ; 148(2)2021 02 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33526425

RESUMEN

Half a century after Lewis Wolpert's seminal conceptual advance on how cellular fates distribute in space, we provide a brief historical perspective on how the concept of positional information emerged and influenced the field of developmental biology and beyond. We focus on a modern interpretation of this concept in terms of information theory, largely centered on its application to cell specification in the early Drosophila embryo. We argue that a true physical variable (position) is encoded in local concentrations of patterning molecules, that this mapping is stochastic, and that the processes by which positions and corresponding cell fates are determined based on these concentrations need to take such stochasticity into account. With this approach, we shift the focus from biological mechanisms, molecules, genes and pathways to quantitative systems-level questions: where does positional information reside, how it is transformed and accessed during development, and what fundamental limits it is subject to?


Asunto(s)
Tipificación del Cuerpo , Animales , Evolución Biológica , Tipificación del Cuerpo/genética , Humanos , Teoría de la Información , Modelos Biológicos
7.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 117(50): 31614-31622, 2020 12 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33268497

RESUMEN

In prokaryotes, thermodynamic models of gene regulation provide a highly quantitative mapping from promoter sequences to gene-expression levels that is compatible with in vivo and in vitro biophysical measurements. Such concordance has not been achieved for models of enhancer function in eukaryotes. In equilibrium models, it is difficult to reconcile the reported short transcription factor (TF) residence times on the DNA with the high specificity of regulation. In nonequilibrium models, progress is difficult due to an explosion in the number of parameters. Here, we navigate this complexity by looking for minimal nonequilibrium enhancer models that yield desired regulatory phenotypes: low TF residence time, high specificity, and tunable cooperativity. We find that a single extra parameter, interpretable as the "linking rate," by which bound TFs interact with Mediator components, enables our models to escape equilibrium bounds and access optimal regulatory phenotypes, while remaining consistent with the reported phenomenology and simple enough to be inferred from upcoming experiments. We further find that high specificity in nonequilibrium models is in a trade-off with gene-expression noise, predicting bursty dynamics-an experimentally observed hallmark of eukaryotic transcription. By drastically reducing the vast parameter space of nonequilibrium enhancer models to a much smaller subspace that optimally realizes biological function, we deliver a rich class of models that could be tractably inferred from data in the near future.


Asunto(s)
Elementos de Facilitación Genéticos/genética , Eucariontes/genética , Regulación de la Expresión Génica , Modelos Genéticos , Transcripción Genética , Complejo Mediador/metabolismo , Factores de Transcripción/metabolismo
8.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 117(40): 25066-25073, 2020 10 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32948691

RESUMEN

The brain represents and reasons probabilistically about complex stimuli and motor actions using a noisy, spike-based neural code. A key building block for such neural computations, as well as the basis for supervised and unsupervised learning, is the ability to estimate the surprise or likelihood of incoming high-dimensional neural activity patterns. Despite progress in statistical modeling of neural responses and deep learning, current approaches either do not scale to large neural populations or cannot be implemented using biologically realistic mechanisms. Inspired by the sparse and random connectivity of real neuronal circuits, we present a model for neural codes that accurately estimates the likelihood of individual spiking patterns and has a straightforward, scalable, efficient, learnable, and realistic neural implementation. This model's performance on simultaneously recorded spiking activity of >100 neurons in the monkey visual and prefrontal cortices is comparable with or better than that of state-of-the-art models. Importantly, the model can be learned using a small number of samples and using a local learning rule that utilizes noise intrinsic to neural circuits. Slower, structural changes in random connectivity, consistent with rewiring and pruning processes, further improve the efficiency and sparseness of the resulting neural representations. Our results merge insights from neuroanatomy, machine learning, and theoretical neuroscience to suggest random sparse connectivity as a key design principle for neuronal computation.


Asunto(s)
Potenciales de Acción/fisiología , Encéfalo/fisiología , Redes Neurales de la Computación , Neuronas/fisiología , Algoritmos , Humanos , Aprendizaje Automático , Modelos Neurológicos , Red Nerviosa/fisiología , Plasticidad Neuronal/fisiología
9.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 17(1): e1008529, 2021 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33411759

RESUMEN

Phenomenological relations such as Ohm's or Fourier's law have a venerable history in physics but are still scarce in biology. This situation restrains predictive theory. Here, we build on bacterial "growth laws," which capture physiological feedback between translation and cell growth, to construct a minimal biophysical model for the combined action of ribosome-targeting antibiotics. Our model predicts drug interactions like antagonism or synergy solely from responses to individual drugs. We provide analytical results for limiting cases, which agree well with numerical results. We systematically refine the model by including direct physical interactions of different antibiotics on the ribosome. In a limiting case, our model provides a mechanistic underpinning for recent predictions of higher-order interactions that were derived using entropy maximization. We further refine the model to include the effects of antibiotics that mimic starvation and the presence of resistance genes. We describe the impact of a starvation-mimicking antibiotic on drug interactions analytically and verify it experimentally. Our extended model suggests a change in the type of drug interaction that depends on the strength of resistance, which challenges established rescaling paradigms. We experimentally show that the presence of unregulated resistance genes can lead to altered drug interaction, which agrees with the prediction of the model. While minimal, the model is readily adaptable and opens the door to predicting interactions of second and higher-order in a broad range of biological systems.


Asunto(s)
Antibacterianos/farmacología , Bacterias , Interacciones Farmacológicas/fisiología , Modelos Biológicos , Bacterias/efectos de los fármacos , Bacterias/genética , Fenómenos Biofísicos , Farmacorresistencia Bacteriana/efectos de los fármacos , Farmacorresistencia Bacteriana/genética , Farmacorresistencia Bacteriana/fisiología , Retroalimentación Fisiológica/efectos de los fármacos , Ribosomas/efectos de los fármacos
10.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(1): 186-191, 2018 01 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29259111

RESUMEN

A central goal in theoretical neuroscience is to predict the response properties of sensory neurons from first principles. To this end, "efficient coding" posits that sensory neurons encode maximal information about their inputs given internal constraints. There exist, however, many variants of efficient coding (e.g., redundancy reduction, different formulations of predictive coding, robust coding, sparse coding, etc.), differing in their regimes of applicability, in the relevance of signals to be encoded, and in the choice of constraints. It is unclear how these types of efficient coding relate or what is expected when different coding objectives are combined. Here we present a unified framework that encompasses previously proposed efficient coding models and extends to unique regimes. We show that optimizing neural responses to encode predictive information can lead them to either correlate or decorrelate their inputs, depending on the stimulus statistics; in contrast, at low noise, efficiently encoding the past always predicts decorrelation. Later, we investigate coding of naturalistic movies and show that qualitatively different types of visual motion tuning and levels of response sparsity are predicted, depending on whether the objective is to recover the past or predict the future. Our approach promises a way to explain the observed diversity of sensory neural responses, as due to multiple functional goals and constraints fulfilled by different cell types and/or circuits.


Asunto(s)
Modelos Neurológicos , Células Receptoras Sensoriales/fisiología , Animales , Humanos
11.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(23): 6088-6093, 2018 06 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29784812

RESUMEN

Although cells respond specifically to environments, how environmental identity is encoded intracellularly is not understood. Here, we study this organization of information in budding yeast by estimating the mutual information between environmental transitions and the dynamics of nuclear translocation for 10 transcription factors. Our method of estimation is general, scalable, and based on decoding from single cells. The dynamics of the transcription factors are necessary to encode the highest amounts of extracellular information, and we show that information is transduced through two channels: Generalists (Msn2/4, Tod6 and Dot6, Maf1, and Sfp1) can encode the nature of multiple stresses, but only if stress is high; specialists (Hog1, Yap1, and Mig1/2) encode one particular stress, but do so more quickly and for a wider range of magnitudes. In particular, Dot6 encodes almost as much information as Msn2, the master regulator of the environmental stress response. Each transcription factor reports differently, and it is only their collective behavior that distinguishes between multiple environmental states. Changes in the dynamics of the localization of transcription factors thus constitute a precise, distributed internal representation of extracellular change. We predict that such multidimensional representations are common in cellular decision-making.


Asunto(s)
Interacción Gen-Ambiente , Péptidos y Proteínas de Señalización Intracelular/fisiología , Factores de Transcripción/metabolismo , Núcleo Celular/metabolismo , Proteínas Quinasas Dependientes de AMP Cíclico/metabolismo , Citoplasma/metabolismo , Proteínas de Unión al ADN/metabolismo , Ambiente , Espacio Extracelular/fisiología , Regulación Fúngica de la Expresión Génica/genética , Proteínas Quinasas Activadas por Mitógenos/metabolismo , Modelos Biológicos , Transporte de Proteínas , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Saccharomycetales/metabolismo , Transducción de Señal , Estrés Fisiológico , Factores de Transcripción/fisiología
12.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 15(7): e1007168, 2019 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31265463

RESUMEN

Mathematical models have been used successfully at diverse scales of biological organization, ranging from ecology and population dynamics to stochastic reaction events occurring between individual molecules in single cells. Generally, many biological processes unfold across multiple scales, with mutations being the best studied example of how stochasticity at the molecular scale can influence outcomes at the population scale. In many other contexts, however, an analogous link between micro- and macro-scale remains elusive, primarily due to the challenges involved in setting up and analyzing multi-scale models. Here, we employ such a model to investigate how stochasticity propagates from individual biochemical reaction events in the bacterial innate immune system to the ecology of bacteria and bacterial viruses. We show analytically how the dynamics of bacterial populations are shaped by the activities of immunity-conferring enzymes in single cells and how the ecological consequences imply optimal bacterial defense strategies against viruses. Our results suggest that bacterial populations in the presence of viruses can either optimize their initial growth rate or their population size, with the first strategy favoring simple immunity featuring a single restriction modification system and the second strategy favoring complex bacterial innate immunity featuring several simultaneously active restriction modification systems.


Asunto(s)
Bacterias/inmunología , Bacterias/virología , Bacteriófagos/inmunología , Biología Computacional , Enzimas de Restricción-Modificación del ADN/inmunología , Ecosistema , Inmunidad Innata , Consorcios Microbianos/inmunología , Modelos Biológicos , Modelos Inmunológicos , Análisis de la Célula Individual , Procesos Estocásticos
13.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 15(9): e1007290, 2019 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31479447

RESUMEN

Across diverse biological systems-ranging from neural networks to intracellular signaling and genetic regulatory networks-the information about changes in the environment is frequently encoded in the full temporal dynamics of the network nodes. A pressing data-analysis challenge has thus been to efficiently estimate the amount of information that these dynamics convey from experimental data. Here we develop and evaluate decoding-based estimation methods to lower bound the mutual information about a finite set of inputs, encoded in single-cell high-dimensional time series data. For biological reaction networks governed by the chemical Master equation, we derive model-based information approximations and analytical upper bounds, against which we benchmark our proposed model-free decoding estimators. In contrast to the frequently-used k-nearest-neighbor estimator, decoding-based estimators robustly extract a large fraction of the available information from high-dimensional trajectories with a realistic number of data samples. We apply these estimators to previously published data on Erk and Ca2+ signaling in mammalian cells and to yeast stress-response, and find that substantial amount of information about environmental state can be encoded by non-trivial response statistics even in stationary signals. We argue that these single-cell, decoding-based information estimates, rather than the commonly-used tests for significant differences between selected population response statistics, provide a proper and unbiased measure for the performance of biological signaling networks.


Asunto(s)
Biología Computacional/métodos , Modelos Biológicos , Transducción de Señal/fisiología , Animales , Señalización del Calcio/fisiología , Sistema de Señalización de MAP Quinasas/fisiología , Mamíferos/fisiología , Análisis de la Célula Individual , Factores de Tiempo , Levaduras/fisiología
14.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 114(38): 10149-10154, 2017 09 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28874581

RESUMEN

Individual computations and social interactions underlying collective behavior in groups of animals are of great ethological, behavioral, and theoretical interest. While complex individual behaviors have successfully been parsed into small dictionaries of stereotyped behavioral modes, studies of collective behavior largely ignored these findings; instead, their focus was on inferring single, mode-independent social interaction rules that reproduced macroscopic and often qualitative features of group behavior. Here, we bring these two approaches together to predict individual swimming patterns of adult zebrafish in a group. We show that fish alternate between an "active" mode, in which they are sensitive to the swimming patterns of conspecifics, and a "passive" mode, where they ignore them. Using a model that accounts for these two modes explicitly, we predict behaviors of individual fish with high accuracy, outperforming previous approaches that assumed a single continuous computation by individuals and simple metric or topological weighing of neighbors' behavior. At the group level, switching between active and passive modes is uncorrelated among fish, but correlated directional swimming behavior still emerges. Our quantitative approach for studying complex, multimodal individual behavior jointly with emergent group behavior is readily extensible to additional behavioral modes and their neural correlates as well as to other species.


Asunto(s)
Modelos Biológicos , Conducta Social , Natación , Pez Cebra , Animales , Femenino , Masculino
15.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 14(5): e1006057, 2018 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29746463

RESUMEN

Retina is a paradigmatic system for studying sensory encoding: the transformation of light into spiking activity of ganglion cells. The inverse problem, where stimulus is reconstructed from spikes, has received less attention, especially for complex stimuli that should be reconstructed "pixel-by-pixel". We recorded around a hundred neurons from a dense patch in a rat retina and decoded movies of multiple small randomly-moving discs. We constructed nonlinear (kernelized and neural network) decoders that improved significantly over linear results. An important contribution to this was the ability of nonlinear decoders to reliably separate between neural responses driven by locally fluctuating light signals, and responses at locally constant light driven by spontaneous-like activity. This improvement crucially depended on the precise, non-Poisson temporal structure of individual spike trains, which originated in the spike-history dependence of neural responses. We propose a general principle by which downstream circuitry could discriminate between spontaneous and stimulus-driven activity based solely on higher-order statistical structure in the incoming spike trains.


Asunto(s)
Potenciales de Acción/fisiología , Biología Computacional/métodos , Modelos Neurológicos , Retina/fisiología , Animales , Masculino , Redes Neurales de la Computación , Dinámicas no Lineales , Ratas , Ratas Long-Evans
16.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 13(9): e1005763, 2017 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28926564

RESUMEN

Advances in multi-unit recordings pave the way for statistical modeling of activity patterns in large neural populations. Recent studies have shown that the summed activity of all neurons strongly shapes the population response. A separate recent finding has been that neural populations also exhibit criticality, an anomalously large dynamic range for the probabilities of different population activity patterns. Motivated by these two observations, we introduce a class of probabilistic models which takes into account the prior knowledge that the neural population could be globally coupled and close to critical. These models consist of an energy function which parametrizes interactions between small groups of neurons, and an arbitrary positive, strictly increasing, and twice differentiable function which maps the energy of a population pattern to its probability. We show that: 1) augmenting a pairwise Ising model with a nonlinearity yields an accurate description of the activity of retinal ganglion cells which outperforms previous models based on the summed activity of neurons; 2) prior knowledge that the population is critical translates to prior expectations about the shape of the nonlinearity; 3) the nonlinearity admits an interpretation in terms of a continuous latent variable globally coupling the system whose distribution we can infer from data. Our method is independent of the underlying system's state space; hence, it can be applied to other systems such as natural scenes or amino acid sequences of proteins which are also known to exhibit criticality.


Asunto(s)
Biología Computacional/métodos , Modelos Neurológicos , Modelos Estadísticos , Neuronas/fisiología , Animales , Neuronas Retinianas/fisiología , Termodinámica , Urodelos
17.
PLoS Genet ; 11(11): e1005639, 2015 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26545200

RESUMEN

Evolution of gene regulation is crucial for our understanding of the phenotypic differences between species, populations and individuals. Sequence-specific binding of transcription factors to the regulatory regions on the DNA is a key regulatory mechanism that determines gene expression and hence heritable phenotypic variation. We use a biophysical model for directional selection on gene expression to estimate the rates of gain and loss of transcription factor binding sites (TFBS) in finite populations under both point and insertion/deletion mutations. Our results show that these rates are typically slow for a single TFBS in an isolated DNA region, unless the selection is extremely strong. These rates decrease drastically with increasing TFBS length or increasingly specific protein-DNA interactions, making the evolution of sites longer than ∼ 10 bp unlikely on typical eukaryotic speciation timescales. Similarly, evolution converges to the stationary distribution of binding sequences very slowly, making the equilibrium assumption questionable. The availability of longer regulatory sequences in which multiple binding sites can evolve simultaneously, the presence of "pre-sites" or partially decayed old sites in the initial sequence, and biophysical cooperativity between transcription factors, can all facilitate gain of TFBS and reconcile theoretical calculations with timescales inferred from comparative genomics.


Asunto(s)
Factores de Transcripción/metabolismo , Sitios de Unión
18.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 112(37): 11508-13, 2015 Sep 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26330611

RESUMEN

The activity of a neural network is defined by patterns of spiking and silence from the individual neurons. Because spikes are (relatively) sparse, patterns of activity with increasing numbers of spikes are less probable, but, with more spikes, the number of possible patterns increases. This tradeoff between probability and numerosity is mathematically equivalent to the relationship between entropy and energy in statistical physics. We construct this relationship for populations of up to N = 160 neurons in a small patch of the vertebrate retina, using a combination of direct and model-based analyses of experiments on the response of this network to naturalistic movies. We see signs of a thermodynamic limit, where the entropy per neuron approaches a smooth function of the energy per neuron as N increases. The form of this function corresponds to the distribution of activity being poised near an unusual kind of critical point. We suggest further tests of criticality, and give a brief discussion of its functional significance.


Asunto(s)
Encéfalo/fisiología , Neuronas/fisiología , Algoritmos , Animales , Entropía , Calor , Modelos Neurológicos , Modelos Estadísticos , Método de Montecarlo , Red Nerviosa , Probabilidad , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Retina/fisiología , Termodinámica , Urodelos
19.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 12(11): e1005148, 2016 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27855154

RESUMEN

Across the nervous system, certain population spiking patterns are observed far more frequently than others. A hypothesis about this structure is that these collective activity patterns function as population codewords-collective modes-carrying information distinct from that of any single cell. We investigate this phenomenon in recordings of ∼150 retinal ganglion cells, the retina's output. We develop a novel statistical model that decomposes the population response into modes; it predicts the distribution of spiking activity in the ganglion cell population with high accuracy. We found that the modes represent localized features of the visual stimulus that are distinct from the features represented by single neurons. Modes form clusters of activity states that are readily discriminated from one another. When we repeated the same visual stimulus, we found that the same mode was robustly elicited. These results suggest that retinal ganglion cells' collective signaling is endowed with a form of error-correcting code-a principle that may hold in brain areas beyond retina.


Asunto(s)
Potenciales de Acción/fisiología , Modelos Neurológicos , Modelos Estadísticos , Red Nerviosa/fisiología , Células Ganglionares de la Retina/fisiología , Visión Ocular/fisiología , Células Cultivadas , Simulación por Computador , Humanos , Transmisión Sináptica/fisiología
20.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 11(7): e1004304, 2015 Jul.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26132103

RESUMEN

Motion tracking is a challenge the visual system has to solve by reading out the retinal population. It is still unclear how the information from different neurons can be combined together to estimate the position of an object. Here we recorded a large population of ganglion cells in a dense patch of salamander and guinea pig retinas while displaying a bar moving diffusively. We show that the bar's position can be reconstructed from retinal activity with a precision in the hyperacuity regime using a linear decoder acting on 100+ cells. We then took advantage of this unprecedented precision to explore the spatial structure of the retina's population code. The classical view would have suggested that the firing rates of the cells form a moving hill of activity tracking the bar's position. Instead, we found that most ganglion cells in the salamander fired sparsely and idiosyncratically, so that their neural image did not track the bar. Furthermore, ganglion cell activity spanned an area much larger than predicted by their receptive fields, with cells coding for motion far in their surround. As a result, population redundancy was high, and we could find multiple, disjoint subsets of neurons that encoded the trajectory with high precision. This organization allows for diverse collections of ganglion cells to represent high-accuracy motion information in a form easily read out by downstream neural circuits.


Asunto(s)
Potenciales de Acción/fisiología , Modelos Neurológicos , Percepción de Movimiento/fisiología , Red Nerviosa/fisiología , Células Ganglionares de la Retina/fisiología , Visión Ocular/fisiología , Potenciales de Acción/efectos de la radiación , Animales , Simulación por Computador , Cobayas , Luz , Percepción de Movimiento/efectos de la radiación , Red Nerviosa/efectos de la radiación , Estimulación Luminosa/métodos , Células Ganglionares de la Retina/efectos de la radiación , Transmisión Sináptica/fisiología , Transmisión Sináptica/efectos de la radiación , Urodelos , Visión Ocular/efectos de la radiación
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