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An information theoretic method to resolve millisecond-scale spike timing precision in a comprehensive motor program. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Sensory systems use precise spike timing codes for information encoding, with emerging evidence of this in various motor behaviors like breathing and flight.
  • Researchers have developed a new method to assess spike timing precision in motor circuits, allowing for the measurement of very small time scales amidst noise in signals.
  • In studying the agile hawk moth, they found that individual muscle types have different levels of timing precision, with all muscles showing precision at sub-millisecond to millisecond scales, highlighting the method's broad applicability to different animal systems.

Article Abstract

Sensory inputs in nervous systems are often encoded at the millisecond scale in a precise spike timing code. There is now growing evidence in behaviors ranging from slow breathing to rapid flight for the prevalence of precise timing encoding in motor systems. Despite this, we largely do not know at what scale timing matters in these circuits due to the difficulty of recording a complete set of spike-resolved motor signals and assessing spike timing precision for encoding continuous motor signals. We also do not know if the precision scale varies depending on the functional role of different motor units. We introduce a method to estimate spike timing precision in motor circuits using continuous MI estimation at increasing levels of added uniform noise. This method can assess spike timing precision at fine scales for encoding rich motor output variation. We demonstrate the advantages of this approach compared to a previously established discrete information theoretic method of assessing spike timing precision. We use this method to analyze the precision in a nearly complete, spike resolved recording of the 10 primary wing muscles control flight in an agile hawk moth, Manduca sexta. Tethered moths visually tracked a robotic flower producing a range of turning (yaw) torques. We know that all 10 muscles in this motor program encode the majority of information about yaw torque in spike timings, but we do not know whether individual muscles encode motor information at different levels of precision. We demonstrate that the scale of temporal precision in all motor units in this insect flight circuit is at the sub-millisecond or millisecond-scale, with variation in precision scale present between muscle types. This method can be applied broadly to estimate spike timing precision in sensory and motor circuits in both invertebrates and vertebrates.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10289674PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1011170DOI Listing

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