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Penalized matrix decomposition for denoising, compression, and improved demixing of functional imaging data

Authors :
Buchanan, E. Kelly
Kinsella, Ian
Zhou, Ding
Zhu, Rong
Zhou, Pengcheng
Gerhard, Felipe
Ferrante, John
Ma, Ying
Kim, Sharon
Shaik, Mohammed
Liang, Yajie
Lu, Rongwen
Reimer, Jacob
Fahey, Paul
Muhammad, Taliah
Dempsey, Graham
Hillman, Elizabeth
Ji, Na
Tolias, Andreas
Paninski, Liam
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Calcium imaging has revolutionized systems neuroscience, providing the ability to image large neural populations with single-cell resolution. The resulting datasets are quite large, which has presented a barrier to routine open sharing of this data, slowing progress in reproducible research. State of the art methods for analyzing this data are based on non-negative matrix factorization (NMF); these approaches solve a non-convex optimization problem, and are effective when good initializations are available, but can break down in low-SNR settings where common initialization approaches fail. Here we introduce an approach to compressing and denoising functional imaging data. The method is based on a spatially-localized penalized matrix decomposition (PMD) of the data to separate (low-dimensional) signal from (temporally-uncorrelated) noise. This approach can be applied in parallel on local spatial patches and is therefore highly scalable, does not impose non-negativity constraints or require stringent identifiability assumptions (leading to significantly more robust results compared to NMF), and estimates all parameters directly from the data, so no hand-tuning is required. We have applied the method to a wide range of functional imaging data (including one-photon, two-photon, three-photon, widefield, somatic, axonal, dendritic, calcium, and voltage imaging datasets): in all cases, we observe ~2-4x increases in SNR and compression rates of 20-300x with minimal visible loss of signal, with no adjustment of hyperparameters; this in turn facilitates the process of demixing the observed activity into contributions from individual neurons. We focus on two challenging applications: dendritic calcium imaging data and voltage imaging data in the context of optogenetic stimulation. In both cases, we show that our new approach leads to faster and much more robust extraction of activity from the data.<br />Comment: 36 pages, 18 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1807.06203
Document Type :
Working Paper