How does transient signaling input affect the spike timing of postsynaptic neuron near the threshold regime: an analytical study

AbstractThe noisy threshold regime, where even a small set of presynaptic neurons can significantly affect postsynaptic spike-timing, is suggested as a key requisite for computation in neurons with high variability. It also has been proposed that signals under the noisy conditions are successfully transferred by a few strong synapses and/or by an assembly of nearly synchronous synaptic activities. We analytically investigate the impact of a transient signaling input on a leaky integrate-and-fire postsynaptic neuron that receives background noise near the threshold regime. The signaling input models a single strong synapse or a set of synchronous synapses, while the background noise represents a lot of weak synapses. We find an analytic solution that explains how the first-passage time (ISI) density is changed by transient signaling input. The analysis allows us to connect properties of the signaling input like spike timing and amplitude with postsynaptic first-passage time density in a noisy environment. Based on the analytic solution, we calculate the Fisher information with respect to the signaling input ’s amplitude. For a wide range of amplitudes, we observe a non-monotonic behavior for the Fisher information as a function of background noise. Moreover, Fisher information non-trivially depends on the signaling input’s amplitude; changing the amplitude, we observe one maximum in the high level of the background noise. The single maximum splits into two maximums in the ...
Source: Journal of Computational Neuroscience - Category: Neuroscience Source Type: research