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Letter |
dmartine{at}loria.fr, LORIA-CNRS Vandoeuvre-Les-Nancy 54506, France
In the insect olfactory system, odor-evoked transient synchronization of antennal lobe (AL) projection neurons (PNs) is phase-locked to the oscillations of the local field potential. Sensory information is contained in the spatiotemporal synchronization pattern formed by the identities of the phase-locked PNs. This article investigates the role of feedback inhibition from the local neurons (LNs) in this coding. First, experimental biological results are reproduced with a reduced computational spiking neural network model of the AL. Second, the low complexity of the model leads to a mathematical analysis from which a lower bound on the phase-locking probability is derived. Parameters involved in the bound indicate that PN phase locking depends not only on the number of LN-evoked inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs) previously received, but also on their temporal jitter. If the inhibition received by a PN at the current oscillatory cycle is both perfectly balanced (i.e., equal to the mean inhibitory drive) and precise (without any jitter), then the PN will be phase-locked at the next oscillatory cycle with probability one.
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A. Tonnelier, H. Belmabrouk, and D. Martinez Event-Driven Simulations of Nonlinear Integrate-and-Fire Neurons. Neural Comput., December 1, 2007; 19(12): 3226 - 3238. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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