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A spike analysis method for characterizing neurons based on phase locking and scaling to the interval between two behavioral events.

Masanori KawabataShogo SomaAkiko Saiki-IshikawaSatoshi NonomuraJunichi YoshidaAlain RíosYutaka SakaiYoshikazu Isomura
Published in: Journal of neurophysiology (2020)
Standard analysis of neuronal functions assesses the temporal correlation between animal behaviors and neuronal activity by aligning spike trains with the timing of a specific behavioral event, e.g., visual cue. However, spike activity is often involved in information processing dependent on a relative phase between two consecutive events rather than a single event. Nevertheless, less attention has so far been paid to such temporal features of spike activity in relation to two behavioral events. Here, we propose "Phase-Scaling analysis" to simultaneously evaluate the phase locking and scaling to the interval between two events in task-related spike activity of individual neurons. This analysis method can discriminate conceptual "scaled"-type neurons from "nonscaled"-type neurons using an activity variation map that combines phase locking with scaling to the interval. Its robustness was validated by spike simulation using different spike properties. Furthermore, we applied it to analyzing actual spike data from task-related neurons in the primary visual cortex (V1), posterior parietal cortex (PPC), primary motor cortex (M1), and secondary motor cortex (M2) of behaving rats. After hierarchical clustering of all neurons using their activity variation maps, we divided them objectively into four clusters corresponding to nonscaled-type sensory and motor neurons and scaled-type neurons including sustained and ramping activities, etc. Cluster/subcluster compositions for V1 differed from those of PPC, M1, and M2. The V1 neurons showed the fastest functional activities among those areas. Our method was also applicable to determine temporal "forms" and the latency of spike activity changes. These findings demonstrate its utility for characterizing neurons.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Phase-Scaling analysis is a novel technique to unbiasedly characterize the temporal dependency of functional neuron activity on two behavioral events and objectively determine the latency and form of the activity change. This powerful analysis can uncover several classes of latently functioning neurons that have thus far been overlooked, which may participate differently in intermediate processes of a brain function. The Phase-Scaling analysis will yield profound insights into neural mechanisms for processing internal information.
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