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an1,2,3
1,2,3
1,21Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies; 2Max Planck Institute for Brain Research, Frankfurt am Main, Germany; and 3Center for Cognitive and Neuronal Studies, Cluj-Napoca, Romania
Submitted 9 July 2007; accepted in final form 22 December 2007
We present a method that estimates the strength of neuronal oscillations at the cellular level, relying on autocorrelation histograms computed on spike trains. The method delivers a number, termed oscillation score, that estimates the degree to which a neuron is oscillating in a given frequency band. Moreover, it can also reliably identify the oscillation frequency and strength in the given band, independently of the oscillation in other frequency bands, and thus it can handle superimposed oscillations on multiple scales (theta, alpha, beta, gamma, etc.). The method is relatively simple and fast. It can cope with a low number of spikes, converging exponentially fast with the number of spikes, to a stable estimation of the oscillation strength. It thus lends itself to the analysis of spike-sorted single-unit activity from electrophysiological recordings. We show that the method performs well on experimental data recorded from cat visual cortex and also compares favorably to other methods. In addition, we provide a measure, termed confidence score, that determines the stability of the oscillation score estimate over trials.
an, Center for Cognitive and Neuronal Studies, Str. Saturn 24-26, 400504 Cluj-Napoca, Romania (E-mail: contact{at}raulmuresan.ro)This article has been cited by other articles:
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