Estimating the Temporal Evolution of Synaptic Weights from Dynamic Functional Connectivity

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Abstract

How to capture the temporal evolution of synaptic weights from measures of dynamic functional connectivity (DFC) between the activity of different simultaneously recorded neurons is an important and open problem in systems neuroscience. To address this issue, we first simulated models of recurrent neural networks of spiking neurons that had a spike-timing-dependent plasticity mechanism generating time-varying synaptic and functional coupling. We then used these simulations to test analytical approaches that relate dynamic functional connectivity to time-varying synaptic connectivity. We investigated how to use different measures of directed DFC, such as cross-covariance and transfer entropy, to build algorithms that infer how synaptic weights evolve over time. We found that, while both cross-covariance and transfer entropy provide robust estimates of structural connectivity and communication delays, cross-covariance better captures the evolution of synaptic weights over time. We also established how leveraging estimates of connectivity derived from entire simulated recordings could further boost the estimation of time-varying synaptic weights from the DFC. These results provide useful information to estimate accurately time variations of synaptic strength from spiking activity measures.

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APA

Celotto, M., Lemke, S., & Panzeri, S. (2022). Estimating the Temporal Evolution of Synaptic Weights from Dynamic Functional Connectivity. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 13406 LNAI, pp. 3–14). Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-15037-1_1

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