Sensory experience modifies spontaneous state dynamics in a large-scale barrel cortical model

  • Authors:
  • Elena Phoka;Mark Wildie;Simon R. Schultz;Mauricio Barahona

  • Affiliations:
  • Department of Bioengineering, Imperial College London, London, UK and Department of Mathematics, Imperial College London, London, UK;Department of Computing, Imperial College London, London, UK;Department of Bioengineering, Imperial College London, London, UK;Department of Mathematics, Imperial College London, London, UK

  • Venue:
  • Journal of Computational Neuroscience
  • Year:
  • 2012

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Abstract

Experimental evidence suggests that spontaneous neuronal activity may shape and be shaped by sensory experience. However, we lack information on how sensory experience modulates the underlying synaptic dynamics and how such modulation influences the response of the network to future events. Here we study whether spike-timing-dependent plasticity (STDP) can mediate sensory-induced modifications in the spontaneous dynamics of a new large-scale model of layers II, III and IV of the rodent barrel cortex. Our model incorporates significant physiological detail, including the types of neurons present, the probabilities and delays of connections, and the STDP profiles at each excitatory synapse. We stimulated the neuronal network with a protocol of repeated sensory inputs resembling those generated by the protraction-retraction motion of whiskers when rodents explore their environment, and studied the changes in network dynamics. By applying dimensionality reduction techniques to the synaptic weight space, we show that the initial spontaneous state is modified by each repetition of the stimulus and that this reverberation of the sensory experience induces long-term, structured modifications in the synaptic weight space. The post-stimulus spontaneous state encodes a memory of the stimulus presented, since a different dynamical response is observed when the network is presented with shuffled stimuli. These results suggest that repeated exposure to the same sensory experience could induce long-term circuitry modifications via `Hebbian' STDP plasticity.