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A neuronal learning rule for sub-millisecond temporal coding

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TLDR
A modelling study based on computer simulations of a neuron in the laminar nucleus of the barn owl shows that the necessary degree of coherence in the signal arrival times can be attained during ontogenetic development by virtue of an unsupervised hebbian learning rule.
Abstract
A paradox that exists in auditory and electrosensory neural systems is that they encode behaviorally relevant signals in the range of a few microseconds with neurons that are at least one order of magnitude slower. The importance of temporal coding in neural information processing is not clear yet. A central question is whether neuronal firing can be more precise than the time constants of the neuronal processes involved. Here we address this problem using the auditory system of the barn owl as an example. We present a modelling study based on computer simulations of a neuron in the laminar nucleus. Three observations explain the paradox. First, spiking of an 'integrate-and-fire' neuron driven by excitatory postsynaptic potentials with a width at half-maximum height of 250 micros, has an accuracy of 25 micros if the presynaptic signals arrive coherently. Second, the necessary degree of coherence in the signal arrival times can be attained during ontogenetic development by virtue of an unsupervised hebbian learning rule. Learning selects connections with matching delays from a broad distribution of axons with random delays. Third, the learning rule also selects the correct delays from two independent groups of inputs, for example, from the left and right ear.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Natural Firing Patterns Imply Low Sensitivity of Synaptic Plasticity to Spike Timing Compared with Firing Rate.

TL;DR: Using synaptic plasticity models, it is found that synaptic changes induced by precise timing of APs are much weaker than suggested by regular stimulation protocols, and can be equivalently induced by modest variations of the AP rate alone.
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Synaptic consolidation: an approach to long-term learning

TL;DR: This review discusses synaptic consolidation, a process that enables synapses to retain their strength for a much longer time (days to years), instead of returning to their original value.
Posted Content

STDP as presynaptic activity times rate of change of postsynaptic activity

TL;DR: A weight update formula is introduced that is expressed only in terms of firing rates and their derivatives and that results in changes consistent with those associated with spike-timing dependent plasticity (STDP) rules and biological observations, even though the explicit timing of spikes is not needed.
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ARBIB: An autonomous robot based on inspirations from biology

TL;DR: By monitoring firing rates of specific neurons and synaptic weights between neural connections as ARBIB learns from its environment, it is confirmed that both classical and higher-order conditioning occur, leading to the emergence of interesting and ecologically valid behaviors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Activity-dependent development of axonal and dendritic delays, or, why synaptic transmission should be unreliable

TL;DR: It is shown that in fact an explicit delay adaptation is not needed if one assumes that the synaptic strengths are modified according to the recently observed temporally asymmetric learning rule with the downregulating branch dominating the upregulating Branch.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A synaptic model of memory: long-term potentiation in the hippocampus

TL;DR: The best understood form of long-term potentiation is induced by the activation of the N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor complex, which allows electrical events at the postsynaptic membrane to be transduced into chemical signals which, in turn, are thought to activate both pre- and post Synaptic mechanisms to generate a persistent increase in synaptic strength.
Book

The organization of behavior

D. O. Hebb
Journal ArticleDOI

Neuronal Population Coding of Movement Direction

TL;DR: The direction of movement was found to be uniquely predicted by the action of a population of motor cortical neurons that can be monitored during various tasks, and similar measures in other neuronal populations could be of heuristic value where there is a neural representation of variables with vectorial attributes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reliability of spike timing in neocortical neurons

TL;DR: Data suggest a low intrinsic noise level in spike generation, which could allow cortical neurons to accurately transform synaptic input into spike sequences, supporting a possible role for spike timing in the processing of cortical information by the neocortex.
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The highly irregular firing of cortical cells is inconsistent with temporal integration of random EPSPs

TL;DR: It is argued that neurons that act as temporal integrators over many synaptic inputs must fire very regularly and only in the presence of either fast and strong dendritic nonlinearities or strong synchronization among individual synaptic events will the degree of predicted variability approach that of real cortical neurons.
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