4.7 Article

A functional spiking neuronal network for tactile sensing pathway to process edge orientation

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-80132-4

Keywords

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Funding

  1. ONR Global award
  2. National University of Singapore
  3. National Science Foundation through the Collaborative Research in Computational Neuroscience initiative [1830444]
  4. Kermanshah University of Medical Sciences, Kermanshah, Iran

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The study modeled three stages of the tactile pathway from the periphery to the cortex and explored the roles of sensory neurons, cuneate nucleus, and cortical neurons in sensing indentation and edge stimuli. By utilizing a biomimetic decoder, edge orientation can be detected more accurately, and it was observed that larger receptive fields convey more information about edge orientation.
To obtain deeper insights into the tactile processing pathway from a population-level point of view, we have modeled three stages of the tactile pathway from the periphery to the cortex in response to indentation and scanned edge stimuli at different orientations. Three stages in the tactile pathway are, (1) the first-order neurons which innervate the cutaneous mechanoreceptors, (2) the cuneate nucleus in the midbrain and (3) the cortical neurons of the somatosensory area. In the proposed network, the first layer mimics the spiking patterns generated by the primary afferents. These afferents have complex skin receptive fields. In the second layer, the role of lateral inhibition on projection neurons in the cuneate nucleus is investigated. The third layer acts as a biomimetic decoder consisting of pyramidal and cortical interneurons that correspond to heterogeneous receptive fields with excitatory and inhibitory sub-regions on the skin. In this way, the activity of pyramidal neurons is tuned to the specific edge orientations. By modifying afferent receptive field size, it is observed that the larger receptive fields convey more information about edge orientation in the first spikes of cortical neurons when edge orientation stimuli move across the patch of skin. In addition, the proposed spiking neural model can detect edge orientation at any location on the simulated mechanoreceptor grid with high accuracy. The results of this research advance our knowledge about tactile information processing and can be employed in prosthetic and bio-robotic applications.

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