Identifying Anatomical Origins of Coexisting Oscillations in the Cortical Microcircuit.

Oscillations are omnipresent in neural population signals, like multi-unit recordings, EEG/MEG, and the local field potential. They have been linked to the population firing rate of neurons, with individual neurons firing in a close-to-irregular fashion at low rates. Using a combination of mean-fiel...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hannah Bos, Markus Diesmann, Moritz Helias
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-10-01
Series:PLoS Computational Biology
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5063581?pdf=render
_version_ 1818305816472584192
author Hannah Bos
Markus Diesmann
Moritz Helias
author_facet Hannah Bos
Markus Diesmann
Moritz Helias
author_sort Hannah Bos
collection DOAJ
description Oscillations are omnipresent in neural population signals, like multi-unit recordings, EEG/MEG, and the local field potential. They have been linked to the population firing rate of neurons, with individual neurons firing in a close-to-irregular fashion at low rates. Using a combination of mean-field and linear response theory we predict the spectra generated in a layered microcircuit model of V1, composed of leaky integrate-and-fire neurons and based on connectivity compiled from anatomical and electrophysiological studies. The model exhibits low- and high-γ oscillations visible in all populations. Since locally generated frequencies are imposed onto other populations, the origin of the oscillations cannot be deduced from the spectra. We develop an universally applicable systematic approach that identifies the anatomical circuits underlying the generation of oscillations in a given network. Based on a theoretical reduction of the dynamics, we derive a sensitivity measure resulting in a frequency-dependent connectivity map that reveals connections crucial for the peak amplitude and frequency of the observed oscillations and identifies the minimal circuit generating a given frequency. The low-γ peak turns out to be generated in a sub-circuit located in layer 2/3 and 4, while the high-γ peak emerges from the inter-neurons in layer 4. Connections within and onto layer 5 are found to regulate slow rate fluctuations. We further demonstrate how small perturbations of the crucial connections have significant impact on the population spectra, while the impairment of other connections leaves the dynamics on the population level unaltered. The study uncovers connections where mechanisms controlling the spectra of the cortical microcircuit are most effective.
first_indexed 2024-12-13T06:32:36Z
format Article
id doaj.art-f52bdc48fe3f46899bccf80a3e306bdd
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1553-734X
1553-7358
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-13T06:32:36Z
publishDate 2016-10-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS Computational Biology
spelling doaj.art-f52bdc48fe3f46899bccf80a3e306bdd2022-12-21T23:56:35ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Computational Biology1553-734X1553-73582016-10-011210e100513210.1371/journal.pcbi.1005132Identifying Anatomical Origins of Coexisting Oscillations in the Cortical Microcircuit.Hannah BosMarkus DiesmannMoritz HeliasOscillations are omnipresent in neural population signals, like multi-unit recordings, EEG/MEG, and the local field potential. They have been linked to the population firing rate of neurons, with individual neurons firing in a close-to-irregular fashion at low rates. Using a combination of mean-field and linear response theory we predict the spectra generated in a layered microcircuit model of V1, composed of leaky integrate-and-fire neurons and based on connectivity compiled from anatomical and electrophysiological studies. The model exhibits low- and high-γ oscillations visible in all populations. Since locally generated frequencies are imposed onto other populations, the origin of the oscillations cannot be deduced from the spectra. We develop an universally applicable systematic approach that identifies the anatomical circuits underlying the generation of oscillations in a given network. Based on a theoretical reduction of the dynamics, we derive a sensitivity measure resulting in a frequency-dependent connectivity map that reveals connections crucial for the peak amplitude and frequency of the observed oscillations and identifies the minimal circuit generating a given frequency. The low-γ peak turns out to be generated in a sub-circuit located in layer 2/3 and 4, while the high-γ peak emerges from the inter-neurons in layer 4. Connections within and onto layer 5 are found to regulate slow rate fluctuations. We further demonstrate how small perturbations of the crucial connections have significant impact on the population spectra, while the impairment of other connections leaves the dynamics on the population level unaltered. The study uncovers connections where mechanisms controlling the spectra of the cortical microcircuit are most effective.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5063581?pdf=render
spellingShingle Hannah Bos
Markus Diesmann
Moritz Helias
Identifying Anatomical Origins of Coexisting Oscillations in the Cortical Microcircuit.
PLoS Computational Biology
title Identifying Anatomical Origins of Coexisting Oscillations in the Cortical Microcircuit.
title_full Identifying Anatomical Origins of Coexisting Oscillations in the Cortical Microcircuit.
title_fullStr Identifying Anatomical Origins of Coexisting Oscillations in the Cortical Microcircuit.
title_full_unstemmed Identifying Anatomical Origins of Coexisting Oscillations in the Cortical Microcircuit.
title_short Identifying Anatomical Origins of Coexisting Oscillations in the Cortical Microcircuit.
title_sort identifying anatomical origins of coexisting oscillations in the cortical microcircuit
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5063581?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT hannahbos identifyinganatomicaloriginsofcoexistingoscillationsinthecorticalmicrocircuit
AT markusdiesmann identifyinganatomicaloriginsofcoexistingoscillationsinthecorticalmicrocircuit
AT moritzhelias identifyinganatomicaloriginsofcoexistingoscillationsinthecorticalmicrocircuit