Beyond spike timing: the role of nonlinear plasticity and unreliable synapses
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
December 1, 2002
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Contributor
Subject(s)
Series
Biological cybernetics
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
0340-1200
Publisher
Springer
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
12461625
Description
Spike-timing-dependent plasticity (STDP) strengthens synapses that are activated immediately before a postsynaptic spike, and weakens those that are activated after a spike. To prevent an uncontrolled growth of the synaptic strengths, weakening must dominate strengthening for uncorrelated spike times. However, this weight-normalization property would preclude Hebbian potentiation when the pre- and postsynaptic neurons are strongly active without specific spike-time correlations. We show that nonlinear STDP as inherent in the data of Markram et al. [(1997) Science 275:213–215] can preserve the benefits of both weight normalization and Hebbian plasticity, and hence can account for learning based on spike-time correlations and on mean firing rates. As examples we consider the moving-threshold property of the Bienenstock–Cooper–Munro rule, the development of direction-selective simple cells by changing short-term synaptic depression, and the joint adaptation of axonal and dendritic delays. Without threshold nonlinearity at low frequencies, the development of direction selectivity does not stabilize in a natural stimulation environment. Without synaptic unreliability there is no causal development of axonal and dendritic delays.
File(s)
File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
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s00422-002-0350-1.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 362.58 KB | published |