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The variability you're observing is caused by local network interactions. The local network connectivity to and from L2/3 pyramidal cells (specifically the L2/3 basket -> L2/3 pyramidal connections) makes their firing particularly sensitive to small variations in exogenous drive timing. Notice the following sequence of events:
Altogether, L2/3 pyramidal spiking rests right near the threshold of local network E/I balance. The tight coupling between L2/3 pyramidal and L2/3 basket cells also allows for pyramidal interneuron gamma (PING) activity to emerge transiently. All that said, I encourage you to play around with the local network connectivity parameters in order to test my assertions above (e.g., try increasing the late proximal drive timing and L2/3 pyramidal weight to test the hypothesis that the ~120 ms barrage of L2/3 pyramidal spikes shifts right and with greater temporal consistency/precision). Note: updated on 4/3/23 |
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I'm going to convert this to a discussion, but feel free to open another issue if you end up finding a bug. |
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Thank you very much @rythorpe, this is really helpful and got me to think in different direction. So as I imagine it now, on a single L2/3 pyramidal level, after firing initially and then inhibited, it continues to receive inputs that are both excitatory and inhibitory but the inhibitory tone is higher so it remains mainly without firing till it reaches a point of getting more excitatory inputs from the L5pyramidal cells which in general are more capable of firing due to their connectivity pattern with their basket cells. The sensitivity to timing of exogenous inputs you mentioned is due to the state of the network when the input arrives? |
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@rythorpe what are the synaptic connections from L5pyr to L2/3pyr? I can't find any in the param files? |
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Ok, I see. So to answer the question about the mechanism of the ~125msecs L2/3pyr firing I had two possibilities in mind from our discussion, first is that the same mechanism you described happens but with the distal drive accumulating excitatory inputs(instead of L5 inputs) till it overcome the inhibitory tone. The second possibility is that the firing is mainly due to the proximal 2 drive (which has stronger connection to L2/3pyr than distal drive) especially in the intersection between d1 & p2. I looked closely at the L2/3pyr firing in different trials with the histograms associated with it and looks like the firing does not happen till the P2 arrives, so it is mainly the second possibility and not the first one. So in conclusion, I think that the L2/3pyr firing at ~125msecs is due to initial sub-threshold excitation from the distal drive then the proximal 2 drive arrives. |
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Hi Ryan @rythorpe , hope all is good :) |
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Hi @jasmainak , @ntolley and everyone,
what explains the big variability in L2/3 pyramidal firing with trials? and why their firing that is usually around 120msecs (supposedly caused by the Distal input) is delayed from the mean of most of the distal input?
I understand that the Vecstim objects connectivity to the different populations of cells is distributed and that the main change in between trials is the seeds (incremented by 1 as I remember) which changes the timing of the spiking input.
These are 25 trials using Kohl's auditory ERP parameters.
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