On the classification of normally distributed neurons: an application to human dentate nucleus.

Biol Cybern

Department of Biophysics, Medical Faculty, University of Belgrade, KCS, Institute of Biophysics PP22, 11129 Belgrade 102, Serbia.

Published: March 2011

One of the major goals in cellular neurobiology is the meaningful cell classification. However, in cell classification there are many unresolved issues that need to be addressed. Neuronal classification usually starts with grouping cells into classes according to their main morphological features. If one tries to test quantitatively such a qualitative classification, a considerable overlap in cell types often appears. There is little published information on it. In order to remove the above-mentioned shortcoming, we undertook the present study with the aim to offer a novel method for solving the class overlapping problem. To illustrate our method, we analyzed a sample of 124 neurons from adult human dentate nucleus. Among them we qualitatively selected 55 neurons with small dendritic fields (the small neurons), and 69 asymmetrical neurons with large dendritic fields (the large neurons). We showed that these two samples are normally and independently distributed. By measuring the neuronal soma areas of both samples, we observed that the corresponding normal curves cut each other. We proved that the abscissa of the point of intersection of the curves could represent the boundary between the two adjacent overlapping neuronal classes, since the error done by such division is minimal. Statistical evaluation of the division was also performed.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00422-011-0426-xDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

human dentate
8
dentate nucleus
8
cell classification
8
dendritic fields
8
neurons
6
classification
5
classification distributed
4
distributed neurons
4
neurons application
4
application human
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!