Neuroimage, in press.

Available online: http://www.idealibrary.com/links/doi/10.1006/nimg.2000.0679

Analysis of calcium imaging signals from the honeybee brain by nonlinear models.

M Stetter, H Greve, CG Galizia, K Obermayer (2000)

 

Abstract 

Recent Ca2+ -imaging studies on the antennal lobe of the honeybee (Apis mellifera) have shown that olfactory stimuli evoke complex spatiotemporal changes of the intracellular Ca2+ concentration, in which stimulus-dependent subsets of glomeruli are highlighted. In this work we use nonlinear models for the quantitative identification of the spatial and temporal properties of the Ca2+ -dependent fluorescence signal. This technique describes time series of the Ca2+ signal as a superposition of biophysically motivated model functions fur photobleaching and Ca2+ dynamics and provides optimal estimates of their amplitudes (signal strengths) and time constants together with error measures. Using this method, we can reliably identify two different stimulus-dependent signal components. Their delays and rise times, 6cl = (0.4 ± 0.3) s, Tcl =(3,8 ± 1.2) s for the fast component and 6c2 = (2.4 ± 0,6) T, Tc2 = (10.3 ± 3.2) s for the slow component, arc constant over space and across different odors and animals. In chronological experiments, the amplitude of the fast (slow) component often decreases (increases) with time. The pattern of the Ca2+ dynamics in space and time can be reliably described as a superposition of only two spatiotemporally separable patterns based on the fast and slow components. However, the distributions of both components over space turn out to differ from each other, and more work has to be done in order to specify their relationship with neuronal activity.

Academic Press, 2000

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