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research article

Temporal whitening by power-law adaptation in neocortical neurons

Pozzorini, Christian Antonio  
•
Naud, Richard  
•
Mensi, Skander  
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2013
Nature Neuroscience

Spike-frequency adaptation (SFA) is widespread in the CNS, but its function remains unclear. In neocortical pyramidal neurons, adaptation manifests itself by an increase in the firing threshold and by adaptation currents triggered after each spike. Combining electrophysiological recordings in mice with modeling, we found that these adaptation processes lasted for more than 20 s and decayed over multiple timescales according to a power law. The power-law decay associated with adaptation mirrored and canceled the temporal correlations of input current received in vivo at the somata of layer 2/3 somatosensory pyramidal neurons. These findings suggest that, in the cortex, SFA causes temporal decorrelation of output spikes (temporal whitening), an energy-efficient coding procedure that, at high signal-to-noise ratio, improves the information transfer.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/nn.3431
Web of Science ID

WOS:000321180900029

Author(s)
Pozzorini, Christian Antonio  
Naud, Richard  
Mensi, Skander  
Gerstner, Wulfram  
Date Issued

2013

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

Published in
Nature Neuroscience
Volume

16

Issue

7

Start page

942

End page

966

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LCN  
Available on Infoscience
October 1, 2013
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/95811
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