Correlation Coefficients Are Insufficient for Analyzing Spike Count Dependencies

Arno Onken, Steffen Grünewälder, Klaus Obermayer

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contribution

Abstract / Description of output

The linear correlation coefficient is typically used to characterize and analyze dependencies of neural spike counts. Here, we show that the correlation coefficient is in general insufficient to characterize these dependencies. We construct two neuron spike count models with Poisson-like marginals and vary their dependence structure using copulas. To this end, we construct a copula that allows to keep the spike counts uncorrelated while varying their dependence strength. Moreover, we employ a network of leaky integrate-and-fire neurons to investigate whether weakly correlated spike counts with strong dependencies are likely to occur in real networks. We find that the entropy of uncorrelated but dependent spike count distributions can deviate from the corresponding distribution with independent components by more than 25 % and that weakly correlated but strongly dependent spike counts are very likely to occur in biological networks. Finally, we introduce a test for deciding whether the dependence structure of distributions with Poissonlike marginals is well characterized by the linear correlation coefficient and verify it for different copula-based models.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationAdvances in Neural Information Processing Systems 22
Pages1383-1391
Number of pages9
Publication statusPublished - 2009

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