{"related_material":{"record":[{"status":"public","relation":"research_data","id":"5584"}],"link":[{"relation":"press_release","url":"https://ist.ac.at/en/news/video-of-moving-discs-reconstructed-from-rat-retinal-neuron-signals/","description":"News on IST Homepage"}]},"status":"public","publication_status":"published","isi":1,"publication":"PLoS Computational Biology","month":"05","citation":{"short":"V. Botella Soler, S. Deny, G.S. Martius, O. Marre, G. Tkačik, PLoS Computational Biology 14 (2018).","ieee":"V. Botella Soler, S. Deny, G. S. Martius, O. Marre, and G. Tkačik, “Nonlinear decoding of a complex movie from the mammalian retina,” PLoS Computational Biology, vol. 14, no. 5. Public Library of Science, 2018.","ama":"Botella Soler V, Deny S, Martius GS, Marre O, Tkačik G. Nonlinear decoding of a complex movie from the mammalian retina. PLoS Computational Biology. 2018;14(5). doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1006057","chicago":"Botella Soler, Vicente, Stephane Deny, Georg S Martius, Olivier Marre, and Gašper Tkačik. “Nonlinear Decoding of a Complex Movie from the Mammalian Retina.” PLoS Computational Biology. Public Library of Science, 2018. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1006057.","apa":"Botella Soler, V., Deny, S., Martius, G. S., Marre, O., & Tkačik, G. (2018). Nonlinear decoding of a complex movie from the mammalian retina. PLoS Computational Biology. Public Library of Science. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1006057","mla":"Botella Soler, Vicente, et al. “Nonlinear Decoding of a Complex Movie from the Mammalian Retina.” PLoS Computational Biology, vol. 14, no. 5, e1006057, Public Library of Science, 2018, doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1006057.","ista":"Botella Soler V, Deny S, Martius GS, Marre O, Tkačik G. 2018. Nonlinear decoding of a complex movie from the mammalian retina. PLoS Computational Biology. 14(5), e1006057."},"ddc":["570"],"volume":14,"scopus_import":"1","year":"2018","_id":"292","doi":"10.1371/journal.pcbi.1006057","quality_controlled":"1","has_accepted_license":"1","date_updated":"2024-02-21T13:45:25Z","external_id":{"isi":["000434012100002"]},"author":[{"orcid":"0000-0002-8790-1914","id":"421234E8-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","last_name":"Botella Soler","first_name":"Vicent","full_name":"Botella Soler, Vicent"},{"full_name":"Deny, Stephane","first_name":"Stephane","last_name":"Deny"},{"full_name":"Martius, Georg S","first_name":"Georg S","last_name":"Martius"},{"full_name":"Marre, Olivier","last_name":"Marre","first_name":"Olivier"},{"full_name":"Tkacik, Gasper","id":"3D494DCA-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","last_name":"Tkacik","orcid":"0000-0002-6699-1455","first_name":"Gasper"}],"user_id":"c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1","department":[{"_id":"GaTk"}],"oa_version":"Published Version","date_published":"2018-05-10T00:00:00Z","oa":1,"abstract":[{"text":"Retina is a paradigmatic system for studying sensory encoding: the transformation of light into spiking activity of ganglion cells. The inverse problem, where stimulus is reconstructed from spikes, has received less attention, especially for complex stimuli that should be reconstructed “pixel-by-pixel”. We recorded around a hundred neurons from a dense patch in a rat retina and decoded movies of multiple small randomly-moving discs. We constructed nonlinear (kernelized and neural network) decoders that improved significantly over linear results. An important contribution to this was the ability of nonlinear decoders to reliably separate between neural responses driven by locally fluctuating light signals, and responses at locally constant light driven by spontaneous-like activity. This improvement crucially depended on the precise, non-Poisson temporal structure of individual spike trains, which originated in the spike-history dependence of neural responses. We propose a general principle by which downstream circuitry could discriminate between spontaneous and stimulus-driven activity based solely on higher-order statistical structure in the incoming spike trains.","lang":"eng"}],"ec_funded":1,"type":"journal_article","tmp":{"legal_code_url":"https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode","image":"/images/cc_by.png","short":"CC BY (4.0)","name":"Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Public License (CC-BY 4.0)"},"article_type":"original","publisher":"Public Library of Science","file":[{"access_level":"open_access","file_id":"5974","content_type":"application/pdf","relation":"main_file","file_name":"2018_Plos_Botella_Soler.pdf","creator":"dernst","checksum":"3026f94d235219e15514505fdbadf34e","date_updated":"2020-07-14T12:45:53Z","file_size":3460786,"date_created":"2019-02-13T11:07:15Z"}],"article_number":"e1006057","day":"10","issue":"5","intvolume":" 14","project":[{"name":"Human Brain Project Specific Grant Agreement 1 (HBP SGA 1)","grant_number":"720270","_id":"25CBA828-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425","call_identifier":"H2020"},{"call_identifier":"FWF","name":"Sensitivity to higher-order statistics in natural scenes","grant_number":"P 25651-N26","_id":"254D1A94-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425"}],"date_created":"2018-12-11T11:45:39Z","language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"file_date_updated":"2020-07-14T12:45:53Z","article_processing_charge":"Yes","title":"Nonlinear decoding of a complex movie from the mammalian retina"}