4.4 Article

Preparing for the unpredictable: adaptive feedback enhances the response to unexpected communication signals

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 107, Issue 4, Pages 1241-1246

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00982.2011

Keywords

neural coding; sensory processing; backpropagation; bursting; electric fish; parallel fibers; predictive feedback; pyramidal cells

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes for Health Research

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Marsat G, Maler L. Preparing for the unpredictable: adaptive feedback enhances the response to unexpected communication signals. J Neurophysiol 107: 1241-1246, 2012. First published December 7, 2011; doi:10.1152/jn.00982.2011.-To interact with the environment efficiently, the nervous system must generate expectations about redundant sensory signals and detect unexpected ones. Neural circuits can, for example, compare a prediction of the sensory signal that was generated by the nervous system with the incoming sensory input, to generate a response selective to novel stimuli. In the first-order electrosensory neurons of a gymnotiform electric fish, a negative image of low-frequency redundant communication signals is subtracted from the neural response via feedback, allowing unpredictable signals to be extracted. Here we show that the cancelling feedback not only suppresses the predictable signal but also actively enhances the response to the unpredictable communication signal. A transient mismatch between the predictive feedback and incoming sensory input causes both to be positive: the soma is suddenly depolarized by the unpredictable input, whereas the neuron's apical dendrites remain depolarized by the lagging cancelling feedback. The apical dendrites allow the backpropagation of somatic spikes. We show that backpropagation is enhanced when the dendrites are depolarized, causing the unpredictable excitatory input to evoke spike bursts. As a consequence, the feedback driven by a predictable low-frequency signal not only suppresses the response to a redundant stimulus but also induces a bursting response triggered by unpredictable communication signals.

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