Dynamical timescale explains marginal stability in excitability dynamics

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Abstract

Action potentials, taking place over milliseconds, are the basis of neural computation. However, the dynamics of excitability over longer, behaviorally relevant timescales remain underexplored. A recent experiment used long-term recordings from single neurons to reveal multiple timescale fluctuations in response to constant stimuli, along with more reliable responses to variable stimuli. Here, we demonstrate that this apparent paradox is resolved if neurons operate in a marginally stable dynamic regime, which we reveal using a novel inference method. Excitability in this regime is characterized by large fluctuations while retaining high sensitivity to external varying stimuli. A new model with a dynamic recovery timescale that interacts with excitability captures this dynamic regime and predicts the neurons’ response with high accuracy. The model explains most experimental observations under several stimulus statistics. The compact structure of our model permits further exploration on the network level.

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Xu, T., & Barak, O. (2017). Dynamical timescale explains marginal stability in excitability dynamics. Journal of Neuroscience, 37(17), 4508–4524. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2340-16.2017

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