As of the 29th of May, 2016, I officially have a Ph.D. in neuroscience! The thesis, Collective Neural Dynamics in Primate Motor Cortex, is available from the Brown University library [PDF].
I studied how single-neuron activity relates to large-scale collective neural dynamics during movement planning and execution. The thesis covers three research projects, which have been (will be) published as stand-alone papers:
- Chapter 2, pp. 88-121: Contribution of LFP dynamics to spiking variability in motor cortex during movement execution. read more...
- Chapter 3, pp. 122:168: Dissociation between single-neuron spiking β-rhythmicity and transient β-LFP oscillations during movement preparation in primate motor cortex. read more…
- Chapter 4, pp. 169-213: Phase diversity and spatiotemporal wavedynamics in primate motor cortex local field potentials. read more…
The introduction contains background on primate motor cortex (Chapter 1, pp. 7-88), including its constituent areas, how they connect with the rest of the brain, and how neurons connect to each-other within each area. It surveys what is known (as of 2016) about motor cortex population dynamics, LFP oscillations, and spatiotemporal waves. The section on statistical methods (Chapter 1.5, pp. 61-87) provides background for signal processing to extract single-neuron spikes and LFPs from multi-electrode array recordings. It also covers how to apply Generalized Linear Point-Process Models (PP-GLM) to analyze spiking neural data.
I'd also like to share two new illustrations from the introduction not published elsewhere:
Figure 1.1
(high resolution PDF, SVG)