Estimating the degree of synchrony or reliability between two or more spike trains is a frequent task in both experi- mental and computational neuroscience. In recent years, many different methods have been proposed that typi- cally compare the timing of spikes on a certain time scale to be fixed beforehand. In this study [1], we propose the ISI-distance, a simple complementary approach that extracts information from the interspike intervals by eval- uating the ratio of the instantaneous frequencies. The method is parameter free, time scale independent and easy to visualize as illustrated by an application to real neuronal spike trains obtained in vitro from rat slices (cf. [2]). We compare the method with six existing approaches (two spike train metrics [3,4], a correlation measure [2,5], a similarity measure [6], and event synchronization [7]) using spike trains extracted from a simulated Hinde- marsh-Rose network [8]. In this comparison the ISI-dis- tance performs as well as the best time-scale-optimized measure based on spike timing, without requiring an externally determined time scale for interaction or com- parison.
Measuring spike train synchrony and reliability
Thomas Kreuz;Antonio Politi
2007
Abstract
Estimating the degree of synchrony or reliability between two or more spike trains is a frequent task in both experi- mental and computational neuroscience. In recent years, many different methods have been proposed that typi- cally compare the timing of spikes on a certain time scale to be fixed beforehand. In this study [1], we propose the ISI-distance, a simple complementary approach that extracts information from the interspike intervals by eval- uating the ratio of the instantaneous frequencies. The method is parameter free, time scale independent and easy to visualize as illustrated by an application to real neuronal spike trains obtained in vitro from rat slices (cf. [2]). We compare the method with six existing approaches (two spike train metrics [3,4], a correlation measure [2,5], a similarity measure [6], and event synchronization [7]) using spike trains extracted from a simulated Hinde- marsh-Rose network [8]. In this comparison the ISI-dis- tance performs as well as the best time-scale-optimized measure based on spike timing, without requiring an externally determined time scale for interaction or com- parison.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
---|---|---|---|
prod_274320-doc_76772.pdf
accesso aperto
Descrizione: Measuring spike train sy nchrony and reliability
Tipologia:
Versione Editoriale (PDF)
Licenza:
Creative commons
Dimensione
250.74 kB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
250.74 kB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri |
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.