Sequential Optimal Design of Neurophysiology Experiments

Jeremy Lewi, Georgia Institute of Technology

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For well over 200 years, scientists and doctors have been poking and prodding brains in every which way in an effort to understand how they work. The earliest pokes were quite crude, often involving permanent forms of brain damage. Technology has given neuroscientists the tools to precisely stimulate the brain and observe its response. For example, neuroscientists studying the visual or auditory system can easily generate any image or sound they can imagine to see how an organism or neuron will respond. Since neuroscientists can now easily design more pokes then they could ever deliver, a fundamental question is “What pokes should they actually use? ” The complexity of the brain means that only a small number of the pokes scientists can deliver will produce any information about the brain. One of the fundamental challenges of experimental neuroscience is finding the right stimulus parameters to produce an informative response in the system being studied. This thesis addresses this problem by developing algorithms to sequentially optimize neurophysiology experiments.

Every experiment we conduct contains information about how the brain works. Before conducting the next experiment we should use what we have already learned to decide which experiment we should perform next. In particular, we should design an experiment which will reveal the most information about the brain. At a high level, neuroscientists already perform this type of sequential, optimal experimental design; for example, crude experiments which knock out entire regions of the brain have given rise to modern experimental techniques which probe the responses of individual neurons using finely-tuned stimuli. The goal of this thesis is to develop automated and rigorous methods for optimizing neurophysiology experiments efficiently and at a much finer time scale. In particular, we present methods for near-instantaneous optimization of the stimulus being used to drive a neuron.

Abstract Author(s): Jeremy Lewi, Robert Butera, Liam Paninski