Neuronal transients
- 22 September 1995
- journal article
- Published by The Royal Society in Proceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 261 (1362) , 401-405
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.1995.0166
Abstract
A recent letter to Nature (Vaadia et al. Nature, Lond. 373, 515-518 (1995)) presented compelling results concerning neuronal interactions in monkey cortex. Vaadia et al. made two fundamental points: (i) it is possible that cortical function is mediated by dynamic modulation of coherent firing among neurons; and (ii) these time-dependent changes in correlations can emerge without modulation of firing rates. These observations have severe implications for models of neural coding and empirical approaches that are based on firing rates (e.g. neuroimaging). This communication presents a simpler explanation for the results presented in Vaadia et al., by noting they are consistent with the correlated expression of stereotyped neuronal transients following (or preceding) a salient event. This re-formulation is important because: (i) correlations measured in terms of transients are not time-dependent, allowing prevailing models of neural coding to be `reinstated'; and (ii) it suggests a powerful analysis based on singular value decomposition of firing rates.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dynamics of neuronal interactions in monkey cortex in relation to behavioural eventsNature, 1995
- Noise, neural codes and cortical organizationCurrent Opinion in Neurobiology, 1994
- Convergence analysis of local feature extraction algorithmsNeural Networks, 1992
- Forming sparse representations by local anti-Hebbian learningBiological Cybernetics, 1990
- The NO hypothesis: possible effects of a short-lived, rapidly diffusible signal in the development and function of the nervous system.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1990
- Development of feature detectors by self-organizationBiological Cybernetics, 1990
- Associative synaptic potentiation and depression: Quantification of dissociable modifications in the hippocampal dentate gyrus favors a particular class of synaptic modification equationsSynapse, 1990
- Self-organization in a perceptual networkComputer, 1988
- Nucleus basalis of Meynert neuronal activity during a delayed response task in monkeyBrain Research, 1986
- Self-organized formation of topologically correct feature mapsBiological Cybernetics, 1982