Non-Poisson Fluctuation Statistics In Neuronal Inter-Spike Intervals (ISI): Hurst parameter Estimates of Mouse Retinal Ganglion Signals. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • There is considerable recent interest in both (i) modelling the retinal ganglion cells, so that the models can generate output that approximates the actual response of the retina (such models will help design retinal prosthetics); and (ii) understanding how relevant information is encoded in the spike patterns generated by the ganglion cells (these neuronal codes will help understand how the brain analyzes visual scenes). Since the signals (as captured by ISI) are fundamentally stochastic, any modelling or analysis tool will have to track, and make assumptions about, the fluctuations or noise inherently present in these signals. Even though there have been recent work claiming that the fluctuations are fractal in nature, showing long-range dependencies, almost all modelling and analysis work continue to assume Poisson fluctuations. The widespread use of the Poisson model is partly for the sake of convenience, and partly due to the fact that those claiming on fractal nature of ISI are contradictory: In [1] a long-range dependency (i.e., Hurst parameter [2], H > 0.5) is claimed in cat's retina, and in [3] an H < 0.5 and a long-range anti-correlation are claimed for paddlefish electroreceptors. We resolve this issue by studying the ISI of more than 50 ganglion cells recorded from two different mouse retinas, and (i) Conclusively show that the Hurst parameter is less than 0.5; we also show why the results presented in [1] are erroneous: methods that do not detrend the data were used.

publication date

  • January 1, 2005

Identity

PubMed ID

  • 17282641

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 2005