Event:
06.10.2025, 17:00 | Bernstein Center for Computational Neuroscience | ||
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Event Type:
Talk
Speaker: Brent Doiron Institute: University of Chicago Title: Shunting conductance at stimulus onset quenches neuronal variability |
Location:
B01.019, LMU Biocenter Großhaderner Str. 2 82152 Martinsried Host: Julijana Gjorgjieva |
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Abstract:
A wealth of experimental studies show that the trial-to-trial variability of neuronal activity is quenched during stimulus evoked responses, and several network models have been proposed that capture this quenching. We analyze in vivo whole cell recordings from principal cells in layer (L) 2/3 of mouse visual cortex, and while the variability of the membrane potential is indeed quenched upon stimulation, the variability of excitatory and inhibitory currents afferent to the neuron are amplified. This discord complicates the simple inheritance assumption that underpins network model explanations of quenched of neuronal variability. We propose and experimentally validate an alternative (yet not mutually exclusive) mechanism for the quenching of neuronal variability. We show how an increase in synaptic conductance in the evoked state shunts the transfer of current to the membrane potential, formally decoupling changes in their trial-to-trial variability. The ubiquity of conductance based neuronal transfer combined with the simplicity of our model, provides an appealing framework. In particular, it shows how the dependence of cellular properties upon neuronal state is a critical, yet often ignored, factor.
Registration Link: |