Symbols and synergy in a neural code

Abstract

Understanding a neural code requires knowledge both of the elementary symbols that transmit information and of the algorithm for translating these symbols into sensory signals or motor actions. We show that these questions can be separated: the information carried by any candidate symbol in the code--- a pattern of spikes across time or across a population of cells---can be measured, independent of assumptions about what these patterns might represent. By comparing the information carried by a compound pattern with the information carried independently by its parts, we measure directly the synergy among these parts. We illustrate the use of these methods by applying them to experiments on the motion sensitive neuron H1 of the fly's visual system, where we confirm that two spikes close together in time carry far more than twice the information carried by a single spike. We analyze the sources of this synergy, and provide evidence that pairs of spikes close together in time may be special symbols in the code of H1.

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