Optimal Balance of the Striatal Medium Spiny Neuron Network
Adam Ponzi and
Jeffery R Wickens
PLOS Computational Biology, 2013, vol. 9, issue 4, 1-21
Abstract:
Slowly varying activity in the striatum, the main Basal Ganglia input structure, is important for the learning and execution of movement sequences. Striatal medium spiny neurons (MSNs) form cell assemblies whose population firing rates vary coherently on slow behaviourally relevant timescales. It has been shown that such activity emerges in a model of a local MSN network but only at realistic connectivities of and only when MSN generated inhibitory post-synaptic potentials (IPSPs) are realistically sized. Here we suggest a reason for this. We investigate how MSN network generated population activity interacts with temporally varying cortical driving activity, as would occur in a behavioural task. We find that at unrealistically high connectivity a stable winners-take-all type regime is found where network activity separates into fixed stimulus dependent regularly firing and quiescent components. In this regime only a small number of population firing rate components interact with cortical stimulus variations. Around connectivity a transition to a more dynamically active regime occurs where all cells constantly switch between activity and quiescence. In this low connectivity regime, MSN population components wander randomly and here too are independent of variations in cortical driving. Only in the transition regime do weak changes in cortical driving interact with many population components so that sequential cell assemblies are reproducibly activated for many hundreds of milliseconds after stimulus onset and peri-stimulus time histograms display strong stimulus and temporal specificity. We show that, remarkably, this activity is maximized at striatally realistic connectivities and IPSP sizes. Thus, we suggest the local MSN network has optimal characteristics – it is neither too stable to respond in a dynamically complex temporally extended way to cortical variations, nor is it too unstable to respond in a consistent repeatable way. Rather, it is optimized to generate stimulus dependent activity patterns for long periods after variations in cortical excitation. Author Summary: The striatum forms the main input to the Basal Ganglia (BG), a subcortical structure involved in reinforcement learning and action selection. It is composed of medium spiny neurons (MSNs) which inhibit each other through a network of collaterals, receive excitatory projections from the cerebral cortex, and are the only cells which project outside the striatum. Because of its inhibitory structure, the MSN network is often thought to act selectively, transmitting the most active cortical inputs downstream in the BG while suppressing others. However, studies show that local MSN network connections are too sparse and weak to perform global selection and their function remains puzzling. Here we investigate a different hypothesis. Rather than generating a static stimulus dependent activity pattern, we suggest the MSN network is optimized to generate stimulus dependent dynamical activity patterns for long time periods after variations in cortical excitation. We demonstrate, using simulations, that the MSN network has special characteristics. It is neither too stable to respond in a dynamically complex temporally extended way to cortical variations, nor is it too unstable to respond in a consistent repeatable way. We discuss how these properties may be utilized in temporally delayed reinforcement learning tasks strongly recruiting the striatum.
Date: 2013
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:plo:pcbi00:1002954
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002954
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