Synaptic unreliability facilitates information transmission in balanced cortical populations

2015 | journal article

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​Synaptic unreliability facilitates information transmission in balanced cortical populations​
Gatys, L. A.; Ecker, A. S. ; Tchumatchenko, T.   & Bethge, M.​ (2015) 
Physical Review. E91(6) art. 062707​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.91.062707 

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Authors
Gatys, Leon A.; Ecker, Alexander S. ; Tchumatchenko, Tatjana ; Bethge, Matthias
Abstract
Synaptic unreliability is one of the major sources of biophysical noise in the brain. In the context of neural information processing, it is a central question how neural systems can afford this unreliability. Here we examine how synaptic noise affects signal transmission in cortical circuits, where excitation and inhibition are thought to be tightly balanced. Surprisingly, we find that in this balanced state synaptic response variability actually facilitates information transmission, rather than impairing it. In particular, the transmission of fast-varying signals benefits from synaptic noise, as it instantaneously increases the amount of information shared between presynaptic signal and postsynaptic current. Furthermore we show that the beneficial effect of noise is based on a very general mechanism which contrary to stochastic resonance does not reach an optimum at a finite noise level.
Issue Date
2015
Journal
Physical Review. E 
ISSN
1539-3755
eISSN
1550-2376
Language
English

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