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Balanced Excitatory and Inhibitory Synaptic Currents Promote Efficient Coding and Metabolic Efficiency

Sengupta, Biswa and Laughlin, Simon B and Niven, Jeremy E (2013) Balanced Excitatory and Inhibitory Synaptic Currents Promote Efficient Coding and Metabolic Efficiency. In: PLOS COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY, 9 (10).

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Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/ 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003263

Abstract

A balance between excitatory and inhibitory synaptic currents is thought to be important for several aspects of information processing in cortical neurons in vivo, including gain control, bandwidth and receptive field structure. These factors will affect the firing rate of cortical neurons and their reliability, with consequences for their information coding and energy consumption. Yet how balanced synaptic currents contribute to the coding efficiency and energy efficiency of cortical neurons remains unclear. We used single compartment computational models with stochastic voltage-gated ion channels to determine whether synaptic regimes that produce balanced excitatory and inhibitory currents have specific advantages over other input regimes. Specifically, we compared models with only excitatory synaptic inputs to those with equal excitatory and inhibitory conductances, and stronger inhibitory than excitatory conductances (i.e. approximately balanced synaptic currents). Using these models, we show that balanced synaptic currents evoke fewer spikes per second than excitatory inputs alone or equal excitatory and inhibitory conductances. However, spikes evoked by balanced synaptic inputs are more informative (bits/spike), so that spike trains evoked by all three regimes have similar information rates (bits/s). Consequently, because spikes dominate the energy consumption of our computational models, approximately balanced synaptic currents are also more energy efficient than other synaptic regimes. Thus, by producing fewer, more informative spikes approximately balanced synaptic currents in cortical neurons can promote both coding efficiency and energy efficiency.

Item Type: Journal Article
Publication: PLOS COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY
Publisher: PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
Additional Information: Copyright for this article belongs to the authors.
Department/Centre: Division of Biological Sciences > Centre for Neuroscience
Date Deposited: 10 Mar 2014 06:30
Last Modified: 10 Mar 2014 06:40
URI: http://eprints.iisc.ac.in/id/eprint/48517

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