Spike sorting by joint probabilistic modeling of neural spike trains and waveforms

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Abstract

This paper details a novel probabilistic method for automatic neural spike sorting which uses stochastic point process models of neural spike trains and parameterized action potential waveforms. A novel likelihood model for observed firing times as the aggregation of hidden neural spike trains is derived, as well as an iterative procedure for clustering the data and finding the parameters that maximize the likelihood. The method is executed and evaluated on both a fully labeled semiartificial dataset and a partially labeled real dataset of extracellular electric traces from rat hippocampus. In conditions of relatively high difficulty (i.e., with additive noise and with similar action potential waveform shapes for distinct neurons) the method achieves significant improvements in clustering performance over a baseline waveform-only Gaussian mixture model (GMM) clustering on the semiartificial set (1.98% reduction in error rate) and outperforms both the GMM and a state-of-the-art method on the real dataset (5.04% reduction in false positive + false negative errors). Finally, an empirical study of two free parameters for our method is performed on the semiartificial dataset. © 2014 Brett A. Matthews and Mark A. Clements.

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APA

Matthews, B. A., & Clements, M. A. (2014). Spike sorting by joint probabilistic modeling of neural spike trains and waveforms. Computational Intelligence and Neuroscience, 2014. https://doi.org/10.1155/2014/643059

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