Title
Neural coding and contextual influences in the whisker system
Abstract
A fundamental problem in neuroscience, to which Prof. Segundo has made seminal contributions, is to understand how action potentials represent events in the external world. The aim of this paper is to review the issue of neural coding in the context of the rodent whiskers, an increasingly popular model system. Key issues we consider are: the role of spike timing; mechanisms of spike timing; decoding and context-dependence. Significant insight has come from the development of rigorous, information theoretic frameworks for tackling these questions, in conjunction with suitably designed experiments. We review both the theory and experimental studies. In contrast to the classical view that neurons are noisy and unreliable, it is becoming clear that many neurons in the subcortical whisker pathway are remarkably reliable and, by virtue of spike timing with millisecond-precision, have high bandwidth for conveying sensory information. In this way, even small (~200 neuron) subcortical modules are able to support the sensory processing underlying sophisticated whisker-dependent behaviours. Future work on neural coding in cortex will need to consider new findings that responses are highly dependent on context, including behavioural and internal states.
Year
DOI
Venue
2009
10.1007/s00422-008-0290-5
Biological Cybernetics
Keywords
Field
DocType
neural code,context dependent,information theory,action potential
Information theory,Neuroscience,Efficient coding hypothesis,Neural coding,Computer science,Barrel cortex,Neural decoding,Artificial intelligence,Decoding methods,Sensory system,Machine learning,Sensory processing
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
100
6
1432-0770
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
5
0.91
6
Authors
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Rasmus S. Petersen1336.67
Stefano Panzeri240462.09
Miguel Maravall351.58