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The Journal of Neuroscience, December 1, 2000, 20(23):8886-8896
Reliability of a Fly Motion-Sensitive Neuron Depends on Stimulus
Parameters
Anne-Kathrin
Warzecha,
Jutta
Kretzberg, and
Martin
Egelhaaf
Lehrstuhl für Neurobiologie, Fakultät für
Biologie, Universität Bielefeld, D-33501 Bielefeld, Germany
The variability of responses of sensory neurons constrains how
reliably animals can respond to stimuli in the outside world. We show
for a motion-sensitive visual interneuron of the fly that the
variability of spike trains depends on the properties of the motion
stimulus, although differently for different stimulus parameters. (1)
The spike count variances of responses to constant and to dynamic
stimuli lie in the same range. (2) With increasing stimulus size, the
variance may slightly decrease. (3) Increasing pattern contrast reduces
the variance considerably. For all stimulus conditions, the spike count
variance is much smaller than the mean spike count and does not depend
much on the mean activity apart from very low activities. Using a model
of spike generation, we analyzed how the spike count variance depends
on the membrane potential noise and the deterministic membrane
potential fluctuations at the spike initiation zone of the neuron. In a
physiologically plausible range, the variance is affected only weakly
by changes in the dynamics or the amplitude of the deterministic
membrane potential fluctuations. In contrast, the amplitude and
dynamics of the membrane potential noise strongly influence the spike
count variance. The membrane potential noise underlying the variability of the spike responses in the motion-sensitive neuron is concluded to
be affected considerably by the contrast of the stimulus but by neither
its dynamics nor its size.
Key words:
reliability; variability; motion vision; neural coding; spike generation; model; fly
Copyright © 2000 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/00/20238886-11$05.00/0
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