English

Quantifying the information transmitted in a single stimulus

Neurons and Cognition 2007-05-23 v1 Quantitative Methods

Abstract

Shannon mutual information provides a measure of how much information is, on average, contained in a set of neural activities about a set of stimuli. It has been extensively used to study neural coding in different brain areas. To apply a similar approach to investigate single stimulus encoding, we need to introduce a quantity specific for a single stimulus. This quantity has been defined in literature by four different measures, but none of them satisfies the same intuitive properties (non-negativity, additivity), that characterize mutual information. We present here a detailed analysis of the different meanings and properties of these four definitions. We show that all these measures satisfy, at least, a weaker additivity condition, i.e. limited to the response set. This allows us to use them for analysing correlated coding, as we illustrate in a toy-example from hippocampal place cells.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.q-bio/0601038,
  title  = {Quantifying the information transmitted in a single stimulus},
  author = {Michele Bezzi},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:q-bio/0601038},
  year   = {2007}
}

Comments

13 pages, 4 figures