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The Journal of Neuroscience, July 15, 2001, 21(14):5328-5343

Negative Interspike Interval Correlations Increase the Neuronal Capacity for Encoding Time-Dependent Stimuli

Maurice J. Chacron1, 2, André Longtin1, and Leonard Maler2

1 Department of Physics, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1N-6N5, and 2 Department of Cellular and Molecular Medecine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1H-8M5

Accurate detection of sensory input is essential for the survival of a species. Weakly electric fish use amplitude modulations of their self-generated electric field to probe their environment. P-type electroreceptors convert these modulations into trains of action potentials. Cumulative relative refractoriness in these afferents leads to negatively correlated successive interspike intervals (ISIs). We use simple and accurate models of P-unit firing to show that these refractory effects lead to a substantial increase in the animal's ability to detect sensory stimuli. This assessment is based on two approaches, signal detection theory and information theory. The former is appropriate for low-frequency stimuli, and the latter for high-frequency stimuli. For low frequencies, we find that signal detection is dependent on differences in mean firing rate and is optimal for a counting time at which spike train variability is minimal. Furthermore, we demonstrate that this minimum arises from the presence of negative ISI correlations at short lags and of positive ISI correlations that extend out to long lags. Although ISI correlations might be expected to reduce information transfer, in fact we find that they improve information transmission about time-varying stimuli. This is attributable to the differential effect that these correlations have on the noise and baseline entropies. Furthermore, the gain in information transmission rate attributable to correlations exhibits a resonance as a function of stimulus bandwidth; the maximum occurs when the inverse of the cutoff frequency of the stimulus is of the order of the decay time constant of refractory effects. Finally, we show that the loss of potential information caused by a decrease in spike-timing resolution is smaller for low stimulus cutoff frequencies than for high ones. This suggests that a rate code is used for the encoding of low-frequency stimuli, whereas spike timing is important for the encoding of high-frequency stimuli.

Key words: electrosensory afferent; electrolocation; interspike intervals; spike train variability; weak signal detection; correlations; information theory; resonance


Copyright © 2001 Society for Neuroscience  0270-6474/01/21145328-16$05.00/0


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