Summary: Researchers have trained neural networks to accelerate the reconstruction of neural circuits.

Source: Max Planck Institute.

Neurobiologists program a neural network for analyzing the brain’s wiring.

How does consciousness arise? Researchers suspect that the answer to this question lies in the connections between neurons. Unfortunately, however, little is known about the wiring of the brain. This is due also to a problem of time: tracking down connections in collected data would require man-hours amounting to many lifetimes, as no computer has been able to identify the neural cell contacts reliably enough up to now. Scientists from the Max Planck Institute of Neurobiology in Martinsried plan to change this with the help of artificial intelligence. They have trained several artificial neural networks and thereby enabled the vastly accelerated reconstruction of neural circuits.

Neurons need company. Individually, these cells can achieve little, however when they join forces neurons form a powerful network which controls our behaviour, among other things. As part of this process, the cells exchange information via their contact points, the synapses. Information about which neurons are connected to each other when and where is crucial to our understanding of basic brain functions and superordinate processes like learning, memory, consciousness and disorders of the nervous system. Researchers suspect that the key to all of this lies in the wiring of the approximately 100 billion cells in the human brain.

To be able to use this key, the connectome, that is every single neuron in the brain with its thousands of contacts and partner cells, must be mapped. Only a few years ago, the prospect of achieving this seemed unattainable. However, the scientists in the Electrons – Photons – Neurons Department of the Max Planck Institute of Neurobiology refuse to be deterred by the notion that something seems “unattainable”. Hence, over the past few years, they have developed and improved staining and microscopy methods which can be used to transform brain tissue samples into high-resolution, three-dimensional electron microscope images. Their latest microscope, which is being used by the Department as a prototype, scans the surface of a sample with 91 electron beams in parallel before exposing the next sample level. Compared to the previous model, this increases the data acquisition rate by a factor of over 50. As a result an entire mouse brain could be mapped in just a few years rather than decades.

Although it is now possible to decompose a piece of brain tissue into billions of pixels, the analysis of these electron microscope images takes many years. This is due to the fact that the standard computer algorithms are often too inaccurate to reliably trace the neurons’ wafer-thin projections over long distances and to identify the synapses. For this reason, people still have to spend hours in front of computer screens identifying the synapses in the piles of images generated by the electron microscope.

Training for neural networks

However the Max Planck scientists led by Jörgen Kornfeld have now overcome this obstacle with the help of artificial neural networks. These algorithms can learn from examples and experience and make generalizations based on this knowledge. They are already applied very successfully in image process and pattern recognition today. “So it was not a big stretch to conceive of using an artificial network for the analysis of a real neural network,” says study leader Jörgen Kornfeld. Nonetheless, it was not quite as simple as it sounds. For months the scientists worked on training and testing so-called Convolutional Neural Networks to recognize cell extensions, cell components and synapses and to distinguish them from each other.

Following a brief training phase, the resulting SyConn network can now identify these structures autonomously and extremely reliably. Its use on data from the songbird brain showed that SyConn is so reliable that there is no need for humans to check for errors. “This is absolutely fantastic as we did not expect to achieve such a low error rate,” says Kornfeld with obvious delight at the success of SyConn, which forms part of his doctoral study. And he has every reason to be delighted as the newly developed neural networks will relieve neurobiologists of many thousands of hours of monotonous work in the future. As a result, they will also reduce the time needed to decode the connectome and, perhaps also, the consciousness, by many years.

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Source: Stefanie Merker – Max Planck Institute

Image Source: NeuroscienceNews.com image is credited to Julia Kuhl.

Original Research: Abstract for “Automated synaptic connectivity inference for volume electron microscopy” by Sven Dorkenwald, Philipp Schubert, Marius F. Killinger, Gregor Urban, Shawn Mikula, Fabian Svara, and Jörgen Kornfeld in Nature Methods. Published online February 27 2017 doi:10.1038/nmeth.4206

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[cbtabs][cbtab title=”MLA”]Max Planck Institute “Understanding the Brain With the Help of Artificial Intelligence.” NeuroscienceNews. NeuroscienceNews, 3 March 2017.

<https://neurosciencenews.com/artificial-intelligence-neurobiology-6195/>.[/cbtab][cbtab title=”APA”]Max Planck Institute (2017, March 3). Understanding the Brain With the Help of Artificial Intelligence. NeuroscienceNew. Retrieved March 3, 2017 from https://neurosciencenews.com/artificial-intelligence-neurobiology-6195/[/cbtab][cbtab title=”Chicago”]Max Planck Institute “Understanding the Brain With the Help of Artificial Intelligence.” https://neurosciencenews.com/artificial-intelligence-neurobiology-6195/ (accessed March 3, 2017).[/cbtab][/cbtabs]

Abstract

Automated synaptic connectivity inference for volume electron microscopy

Teravoxel volume electron microscopy data sets from neural tissue can now be acquired in weeks, but data analysis requires years of manual labor. We developed the SyConn framework, which uses deep convolutional neural networks and random forest classifiers to infer a richly annotated synaptic connectivity matrix from manual neurite skeleton reconstructions by automatically identifying mitochondria, synapses and their types, axons, dendrites, spines, myelin, somata and cell types. We tested our approach on serial block-face electron microscopy data sets from zebrafish, mouse and zebra finch, and computed the synaptic wiring of songbird basal ganglia. We found that, for example, basal-ganglia cell types with high firing rates in vivo had higher densities of mitochondria and vesicles and that synapse sizes and quantities scaled systematically, depending on the innervated postsynaptic cell types.

“Automated synaptic connectivity inference for volume electron microscopy” by Sven Dorkenwald, Philipp Schubert, Marius F. Killinger, Gregor Urban, Shawn Mikula, Fabian Svara, and Jörgen Kornfeld in Nature Methods. Published online February 27 2017 doi:10.1038/nmeth.4206

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