4.4 Article

Ion diffusion may introduce spurious current sources in current-source density (CSD) analysis

期刊

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
卷 118, 期 1, 页码 114-120

出版社

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00976.2016

关键词

current source density; electrodiffusion; extracellular potential; ion diffusion

资金

  1. European Union Seventh Framework Programme (Human Brain Project, HBP) [604102]
  2. Research Council of Norway (ISP, BIOTEK2021/Digital Life)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Current-source density (CSD) analysis is a well-established method for analyzing recorded local field potentials (LFPs), that is, the low-frequency part of extracellular potentials. Standard CSD theory is based on the assumption that all extracellular currents are purely ohmic, and thus neglects the possible impact from ionic diffusion on recorded potentials. However, it has previously been shown that in physiological conditions with large ion-concentration gradients, diffusive currents can evoke slow shifts in extracellular potentials. Using computer simulations, we here show that diffusion-evoked potential shifts can introduce errors in standard CSD analysis, and can lead to prediction of spurious current sources. Further, we here show that the diffusion-evoked prediction errors can be removed by using an improved CSD estimator which accounts for concentration-dependent effects. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Standard CSD analysis does not account for ionic diffusion. Using biophysically realistic computer simulations, we show that unaccounted-for diffusive currents can lead to the prediction of spurious current sources. This finding may be of strong interest for in vivo electrophysiologists doing extracellular recordings in general, and CSD analysis in particular.

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