extracting low-dimensional dynamic
Extracting low-dimensional dynamics from multiple large-scale neural population recordings by learning to predict correlations
A powerful approach for understanding neural population dynamics is to extract low-dimensional trajectories from population recordings using dimensionality reduction methods. Current approaches for dimensionality reduction on neural data are limited to single population recordings, and can not identify dynamics embedded across multiple measurements. We propose an approach for extracting low-dimensional dynamics from multiple, sequential recordings. Our algorithm scales to data comprising millions of observed dimensions, making it possible to access dynamics distributed across large populations or multiple brain areas. Building on subspace-identification approaches for dynamical systems, we perform parameter estimation by minimizing a moment-matching objective using a scalable stochastic gradient descent algorithm: The model is optimized to predict temporal covariations across neurons and across time. We show how this approach naturally handles missing data and multiple partial recordings, and can identify dynamics and predict correlations even in the presence of severe subsampling and small overlap between recordings. We demonstrate the effectiveness of the approach both on simulated data and a whole-brain larval zebrafish imaging dataset.
Extracting low-dimensional dynamics from multiple large-scale neural population recordings by learning to predict correlations
A powerful approach for understanding neural population dynamics is to extract low-dimensional trajectories from population recordings using dimensionality reduction methods. Current approaches for dimensionality reduction on neural data are limited to single population recordings, and can not identify dynamics embedded across multiple measurements. We propose an approach for extracting low-dimensional dynamics from multiple, sequential recordings. Our algorithm scales to data comprising millions of observed dimensions, making it possible to access dynamics distributed across large populations or multiple brain areas. Building on subspace-identification approaches for dynamical systems, we perform parameter estimation by minimizing a moment-matching objective using a scalable stochastic gradient descent algorithm: The model is optimized to predict temporal covariations across neurons and across time.
Reviews: Extracting low-dimensional dynamics from multiple large-scale neural population recordings by learning to predict correlations
The authors suggest a method to estimate latent low dimensional dynamics from sequential partial observations of a population. Using estimates of lagged covariances, the method is able to reconstruct unobserved covariances quite well. The extra constraints introduced by looking at several lags allow for very small overlaps between the observed subsets. This is an important work, as many imaging techniques have an inherent tradeoff between their sampling rate and the size of the population. A recent relevant work considered this from the perspective of inferring connectivity in a recurrent neural network (parameters of a specific nonlinear model with observations of the entire subset) [1].
Extracting low-dimensional dynamics from multiple large-scale neural population recordings by learning to predict correlations
Nonnenmacher, Marcel, Turaga, Srinivas C., Macke, Jakob H.
A powerful approach for understanding neural population dynamics is to extract low-dimensional trajectories from population recordings using dimensionality reduction methods. Current approaches for dimensionality reduction on neural data are limited to single population recordings, and can not identify dynamics embedded across multiple measurements. We propose an approach for extracting low-dimensional dynamics from multiple, sequential recordings. Our algorithm scales to data comprising millions of observed dimensions, making it possible to access dynamics distributed across large populations or multiple brain areas. Building on subspace-identification approaches for dynamical systems, we perform parameter estimation by minimizing a moment-matching objective using a scalable stochastic gradient descent algorithm: The model is optimized to predict temporal covariations across neurons and across time.