Erick Olivares, Matthew H. Higgs, Charles J. Wilson
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Local inhibition in a model of the indirect pathway globus pallidus network slows and deregularizes background firing, but sharpens and synchronizes responses to striatal input
The external segment of globus pallidus (GPe) is a network of oscillatory neurons connected by inhibitory synapses. We studied the intrinsic dynamic and the response to a shared brief inhibitory stimulus in a model GPe network. Individual neurons were simulated using a phase resetting model based on measurements from mouse GPe neurons studied in slices. The neurons showed a broad heterogeneity in their firing rates and in the shapes and sizes of their phase resetting curves. Connectivity in the network was set to match experimental measurements. We generated statistically equivalent neuron heterogeneity in a small-world model, in which 99% of connections were made with near neighbors and 1% at random, and in a model with entirely random connectivity. In both networks, the resting activity was slowed and made more irregular by the local inhibition, but it did not show any periodic pattern. Cross-correlations among neuron pairs were limited to directly connected neurons. When stimulated by a shared inhibitory input, the individual neuron responses separated into two groups: one with a short and stereotyped period of inhibition followed by a transient increase in firing probability, and the other responding with a sustained inhibition. Despite differences in firing rate, the responses of the first group of neurons were of fixed duration and were synchronized across cells.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Computational Neuroscience provides a forum for papers that fit the interface between computational and experimental work in the neurosciences. The Journal of Computational Neuroscience publishes full length original papers, rapid communications and review articles describing theoretical and experimental work relevant to computations in the brain and nervous system. Papers that combine theoretical and experimental work are especially encouraged. Primarily theoretical papers should deal with issues of obvious relevance to biological nervous systems. Experimental papers should have implications for the computational function of the nervous system, and may report results using any of a variety of approaches including anatomy, electrophysiology, biophysics, imaging, and molecular biology. Papers investigating the physiological mechanisms underlying pathologies of the nervous system, or papers that report novel technologies of interest to researchers in computational neuroscience, including advances in neural data analysis methods yielding insights into the function of the nervous system, are also welcomed (in this case, methodological papers should include an application of the new method, exemplifying the insights that it yields).It is anticipated that all levels of analysis from cognitive to cellular will be represented in the Journal of Computational Neuroscience.