21 research outputs found
Computational Astrocyence: Astrocytes encode inhibitory activity into the frequency and spatial extent of their calcium elevations
Deciphering the complex interactions between neurotransmission and astrocytic
elevations is a target promising a comprehensive understanding of
brain function. While the astrocytic response to excitatory synaptic activity
has been extensively studied, how inhibitory activity results to intracellular
waves remains elusive. In this study, we developed a compartmental
astrocytic model that exhibits distinct levels of responsiveness to inhibitory
activity. Our model suggested that the astrocytic coverage of inhibitory
terminals defines the spatial and temporal scale of their elevations.
Understanding the interplay between the synaptic pathways and the astrocytic
responses will help us identify how astrocytes work independently and
cooperatively with neurons, in health and disease.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, IEEE-EMBS International Conference on Biomedical
and Health Informatics (BHI '19
A Comparative Analysis of Speed Profile Models for Ankle Pointing Movements: Evidence that Lower and Upper Extremity Discrete Movements are Controlled by a Single Invariant Strategy
Little is known about whether our knowledge of how the central nervous system controls the upper extremities (UE), can generalize, and to what extent to the lower limbs. Our continuous efforts to design the ideal adaptive robotic therapy for the lower limbs of stroke patients and children with cerebral palsy highlighted the importance of analyzing and modeling the kinematics of the lower limbs, in general, and those of the ankle joints, in particular. We recruited 15 young healthy adults that performed in total 1,386 visually evoked, visually guided, and target-directed discrete pointing movements with their ankle in dorsal–plantar and inversion–eversion directions. Using a non-linear, least-squares error-minimization procedure, we estimated the parameters for 19 models, which were initially designed to capture the dynamics of upper limb movements of various complexity. We validated our models based on their ability to reconstruct the experimental data. Our results suggest a remarkable similarity between the top-performing models that described the speed profiles of ankle pointing movements and the ones previously found for the UE both during arm reaching and wrist pointing movements. Among the top performers were the support-bounded lognormal and the beta models that have a neurophysiological basis and have been successfully used in upper extremity studies with normal subjects and patients. Our findings suggest that the same model can be applied to different “human” hardware, perhaps revealing a key invariant in human motor control. These findings have a great potential to enhance our rehabilitation efforts in any population with lower extremity deficits by, for example, assessing the level of motor impairment and improvement as well as informing the design of control algorithms for therapeutic ankle robots
Introducing Astrocytes on a Neuromorphic Processor: Synchronization, Local Plasticity and Edge of Chaos
While there is still a lot to learn about astrocytes and their
neuromodulatory role in the spatial and temporal integration of neuronal
activity, their introduction to neuromorphic hardware is timely, facilitating
their computational exploration in basic science questions as well as their
exploitation in real-world applications. Here, we present an astrocytic module
that enables the development of a spiking Neuronal-Astrocytic Network (SNAN)
into Intel's Loihi neuromorphic chip. The basis of the Loihi module is an
end-to-end biophysically plausible compartmental model of an astrocyte that
simulates the intracellular activity in response to the synaptic activity in
space and time. To demonstrate the functional role of astrocytes in SNAN, we
describe how an astrocyte may sense and induce activity-dependent neuronal
synchronization, switch on and off spike-time-dependent plasticity (STDP) to
introduce single-shot learning, and monitor the transition between ordered and
chaotic activity at the synaptic space. Our module may serve as an extension
for neuromorphic hardware, by either replicating or exploring the distinct
computational roles that astrocytes have in forming biological intelligence.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure