5 research outputs found

    First steps for presentation and analysis of calcium imaging data

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    Calcium imaging is a widely used tool in neuroscience, and our community now has access to multiple computational tools to process and analyze these data. However, significant portion of work with imaging data relies on much simpler approaches than offered in these software packages. Correlation with stimuli or behavior, detection of periodic activity, dimensionality reduction, and other basic approaches can be straight-forward for researchers seasoned in data analysis, but unfamiliar to larger community of experimental neuroscientists. Here we provide examples of such analysis using Python language together with sample open-access datasets. We discuss questions addressed with standard algorithms and offer documented Jupiter notebooks ready to be adapted for other data

    Data-driven segmentation of cortical calcium dynamics.

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    Demixing signals in transcranial videos of neuronal calcium flux across the cerebral hemispheres is a key step before mapping features of cortical organization. Here we demonstrate that independent component analysis can optimally recover neural signal content in widefield recordings of neuronal cortical calcium dynamics captured at a minimum sampling rate of 1.5×106 pixels per one-hundred millisecond frame for seventeen minutes with a magnification ratio of 1:1. We show that a set of spatial and temporal metrics obtained from the components can be used to build a random forest classifier, which separates neural activity and artifact components automatically at human performance. Using this data, we establish functional segmentation of the mouse cortex to provide a map of ~115 domains per hemisphere, in which extracted time courses maximally represent the underlying signal in each recording. Domain maps revealed substantial regional motifs, with higher order cortical regions presenting large, eccentric domains compared with smaller, more circular ones in primary sensory areas. This workflow of data-driven video decomposition and machine classification of signal sources can greatly enhance high quality mapping of complex cerebral dynamics
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