NCQMMLFeb 17, 2015

Reconstruction of recurrent synaptic connectivity of thousands of neurons from simulated spiking activity

arXiv:1502.04993v253 citations
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This addresses the challenge of analyzing synaptic network structure on a cellular scale for neuroscience, enabling potential inference from large-scale recordings, though it is incremental as it builds on previous generalized linear model methods.

The authors tackled the problem of reconstructing synaptic connectivity in large recurrent neuronal networks from thousands of parallel spike train recordings, achieving a misclassification error rate of less than 1% under ideal conditions in simulated networks.

Dynamics and function of neuronal networks are determined by their synaptic connectivity. Current experimental methods to analyze synaptic network structure on the cellular level, however, cover only small fractions of functional neuronal circuits, typically without a simultaneous record of neuronal spiking activity. Here we present a method for the reconstruction of large recurrent neuronal networks from thousands of parallel spike train recordings. We employ maximum likelihood estimation of a generalized linear model of the spiking activity in continuous time. For this model the point process likelihood is concave, such that a global optimum of the parameters can be obtained by gradient ascent. Previous methods, including those of the same class, did not allow recurrent networks of that order of magnitude to be reconstructed due to prohibitive computational cost and numerical instabilities. We describe a minimal model that is optimized for large networks and an efficient scheme for its parallelized numerical optimization on generic computing clusters. For a simulated balanced random network of 1000 neurons, synaptic connectivity is recovered with a misclassification error rate of less than 1% under ideal conditions. We show that the error rate remains low in a series of example cases under progressively less ideal conditions. Finally, we successfully reconstruct the connectivity of a hidden synfire chain that is embedded in a random network, which requires clustering of the network connectivity to reveal the synfire groups. Our results demonstrate how synaptic connectivity could potentially be inferred from large-scale parallel spike train recordings.

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