English

Metabolically Efficient Codes in The Retina

Soft Condensed Matter 2007-05-23 v1 Disordered Systems and Neural Networks Neurons and Cognition

Abstract

We tested the hypothesis that the neural code of retinal ganglion cells is optimized to transmit visual information at minimal metabolic cost. Under a broad ensemble of light patterns, ganglion cell spike trains consisted of sparse, precise bursts of spikes. These bursts were viewed as independent neural symbols. The noise in each burst was measured via repeated presentation of the visual stimulus, and the energy cost was estimated from the total charge flow in a biophysically realistic model of ganglion cell spiking. Given these costs and noise, the theory of efficient codes predicts an optimal distribution of symbol usage. Symbols that are either noisy or metabolically costly are suppressed in this optimal code. We found excellent qualitative and quantitative agreement with the measured distribution of burst sizes for ganglion cells in the tiger salamander retina.

Cite

@article{arxiv.cond-mat/0105128,
  title  = {Metabolically Efficient Codes in The Retina},
  author = {Vijay Balasubramanian and Michael J Berry},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:cond-mat/0105128},
  year   = {2007}
}

Comments

LaTeX, 22 pages, 9 separate PS figures