Information of Epileptic Mechanism and its Systemic Change-points in a Zebrafish's Brain-wide Calcium Imaging Video Data
Abstract
The epileptic mechanism is postulated as that an animal's neurons gradually diminish their inhibition function coupled with enhanced excitation when an epileptic event is approaching. Calcium imaging technique is designed to directly record brain-wide neurons activity in order to discover the underlying epileptic mechanism. In this paper, using one brain-wide calcium imaging video of Zebrafish, we compute dynamic pattern information of the epileptic mechanism, and devise three graphical displays to show the visible functional aspect of epileptic mechanism over five inter-ictal periods. The foundation of our data-driven computations for such dynamic patterns relies on one universal phenomenon discovered across 696 informative pixels. This universality is that each pixel's progressive 5-percentile process oscillates in an irregular fashion at first, but, after the middle point of inter-ictal period, the oscillation is replaced by a steady increasing trend. Such dynamic patterns are collectively transformed into a visible systemic change-point as an early warning signal (EWS) of an incoming epileptic event. We conclude through the graphic displays that pattern information extracted from the calcium imaging video realistically reveals the Zebrafish's authentic epileptic mechanism.
- Publication:
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arXiv e-prints
- Pub Date:
- February 2018
- DOI:
- 10.48550/arXiv.1803.04363
- arXiv:
- arXiv:1803.04363
- Bibcode:
- 2018arXiv180304363Z
- Keywords:
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- Quantitative Biology - Neurons and Cognition
- E-Print:
- 8 Pages, 11 figures