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README.md

Dataset of cortical activity recorded with high spatial resolution from anesthetized rats

Summary

Here, we present an electrophysiological dataset (~0.9 TB overall size) recorded from the neocortex of twenty rats anesthetized with ketamine/xylazine. The wideband, spontaneous recordings (n = 109) were acquired with a single-shank silicon-based probe having 128 densely packed recording sites arranged in a 32x4 array (Fiáth et al., 2018). The dataset contains the activity of a total of 7126 sorted single units extracted from all layers of the cortex. Here, we share raw neural recordings, as well as spike times, extracellular spike waveforms and several properties of units packaged in a standardized electrophysiological data format. For technical validation of our dataset, we provide the distributions of derived single unit properties along with various spike sorting quality metrics.

Repository structure

Each recording and corresponding metadata, single unit properties and quality metrics were packaged in the Neurodata Without Borders: Neurophysiology version 2.0 (NWB:N 2.0) data format using the MatNWB API. A single NWB file was created from each recording. NWB files were placed in folders based on the identifier of the animal (from Rat01 to Rat20), probe insertion sequence (Insertion1 or Insertion2) and cortical depth (from Depth1 to Depth3). The filename of the NWB file (identifier) was constructed by concatenating the above information (e.g., Rat01_Insertion2_Depth3).

The CSV file named "Animal_characteristics_and_targeted_cortical_areas" contains information about the weight and sex of animals, as well as about the cortical area and stereotaxic coordinates corresponding to each probe insertion. The "Recording_characteristics" CSV file lists several useful properties for each NWB file including the file size, the duration of the recording, the cortical location, the single unit yield, the average signal-to-noise ratio of single units, the degree of power line (50 Hz) noise contamination (given by the power spectral density value measured at 50 Hz, and also by the ratio of the power spectral density measured at 50 Hz to the power spectral density measured at 49 Hz), the RMS noise and RMS signal levels.

NWB file structure

Each NWB file contains several main groups which are similar to directories. The acquisition group contains the continuous wideband 128-channel data (‘wideband_multichannel_recording’) in a compressed form, as well as several parameters related to the raw data such as the measurement unit or the data conversion number. The general group contains metadata about the experiments and consists of several subgroups, related to the recording probe (‘general/devices’; ‘general/extracellular_ephys’) or the subjects of the experiments (‘general/subject’). Former subgroups carry information about the probe location (brain area and stereotaxic coordinates) and the relative positions and laminar location of recordings sites, while the latter contains metadata about the animal (e.g., sex, species, subject ID, or weight). Information about spike sorting and single units and corresponding data are available in the units group. For each unit, we included here the mean and standard deviation of their spike waveform on all channels, calculated both from the filtered (‘mean_waveform_all_channels_filt’; ’waveform_sd_all_channels_filt’) and the wideband data (‘mean_waveform_all_channels_raw’; ’ waveform_sd_all_channels_raw’). For an easier visualization of the multichannel spike waveform in two dimensions, we have also added an array which contains the mean spike waveform in the 32 x 4 shape of the electrode array (‘mean_waveform_all_channels_filt_32x4’; ’mean_waveform_all_channels_raw_32x4’). Furthermore, the spike waveform recorded on the channel with the largest spike (i.e., peak waveform channel) was saved separately (‘mean_waveform_peak_channel_filt’, ‘mean_waveform_peak_channel_raw’). Several single unit properties and cluster quality metrics, as well as the spike times and spike count of each unit were saved in the units group. Furthermore, to aid users in selecting and analyzing a subset of this dataset appropriate for their research goals, we also created an NWB file (‘allSingleUnits.nwb’) which contains all single units with all the properties listed above, along with the identifier of the recording (‘units/session_id’) and the cortical area (‘units/cortical_area’) they originate from. The structure of NWB files can be explored using the HDFView software.

Downloading the dataset

Recordings can be downloaded individually through the web interface or using the GIN Client.

Using the GIN Client, the dataset can be downloaded the following way:

  1. Clone the repository into the current working directory using the following command:

    gin get UlbertLab/High_Resolution_Cortical_Spikes
    
  2. The previous command will download the small files and the file structure of the repository. Large files (i.e., most files of the dataset) will be included as pointer files but the data will not be included. To get the content of the big files you need to download them separately the following way:

    • Move into the directory of the local copy of the repository:

      cd High_Resolution_Cortical_Spikes
      
    • Use the following command to download a single or multiple files (see below for examples):

      gin get-content filePath/fileName
      
  3. Examples

    • Downloading a single file:

      gin get-content allSingleUnits.nwb
      gin get-content Rat01/Insertion1/Depth1/Rat01_Insertion1_Depth1.nwb
      
    • Downloading all files located in a particular directory:

      gin get-content Rat01
      
    • Or you may download the contents of all files by using the command with no arguments:

      gin get-content
      

More information and guides for the GIN Client are available here. For other ways of accessing the data, please refer to GIN's FAQ.

Interacting with the NWB files

Users can import data from NWB files using the PyNWB and MatNWB APIs, or using SpikeInterface. Loaded samples of the raw data have to be multiplied by a conversion number (0.195) to get the amplitudes in microvolts. Here we provide some examples how users can import data from NWB files using the MATLAB-based MatNWB API.

Loading a short segment (20.000 samples corresponding to 1 second of data) of the raw wideband recording on all (128) channels:

1.	nwb = nwbRead('Rat01_Insertion1_Depth1.nwb');
2.	dataChunk=nwb.acquisition.get('wideband_multichannel_recording').data.load([1, 1], [128, 20000]);

It is important to note that TimeSeries data types in NWB files are stored with time in the first dimension and channels in the second, but dimensions are reversed in MatNWB.

Loading and plotting the mean spike waveform of a specific single unit on the peak waveform channel:

3.	peakChannels = nwb.units.vectordata.get('peak_waveform_channel').data.load();
4.	meanWaveforms = nwb.units.vectordata.get('mean_waveform_all_channels_filt').data.load();
5.	mySingleUnit = 11;
6.	singleUnitWaveform = meanWaveforms(peakChannels(mySingleUnit), :, mySingleUnit);
7.	plot(singleUnitWaveform);

Loading the isolation distance quality metric of all units found in a single NWB file:

8.	IDvalues = nwb.units.vectordata.get('isolation_distance').data.load();

Spike times are stored in a special structure called ragged arrays consisting of two vectors. The spike_times vector contains all spike times of all single units concatenated one after the other, while the spike_times_index vector stores where the spike times of individual single units are located in the spike_index vector (see also https://neurodatawithoutborders.github.io/matnwb/tutorials/html/ecephys.html#H_97F533F8).

We can load the spikes times of a specific single unit (in seconds) the following way:

9.	allSpikeTimes = nwb.units.spike_times.data.load();
10.	spikeTimesIndex = nwb.units.spike_times_index.data.load();
11.	spikesOfSingleUnit2 = allSpikeTimes(spikeTimesIndex(1)+1 : spikeTimesIndex(2));

SpikeInterface can also be used to load the wideband data and single unit properties (in Python):

1.	import spikeextractors as se
2.	nwbPath = 'Rat01_Insertion1_Depth1.nwb'
3.	recording = se.NwbRecordingExtractor(nwbPath)
4.	sorting = se.NwbSortingExtractor(nwbPath)
5.	mySingleUnit = 2
6.	sorting.get_unit_property(mySingleUnit,'isolation_distance')

Related Publications

  • Fiáth, R., Raducanu, B. C., Musa, S., Andrei, A., Lopez, C. M., van Hoof, C., Ruther, P., Aarts, A., Horváth, D., Ulbert, I. (2018) A silicon-based neural probe with densely-packed low-impedance titanium nitride microelectrodes for ultrahigh-resolution in vivo recordings. Biosensors and Bioelectronics 106: 86-92. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bios.2018.01.060

Licensing

LicenseImg

The dataset is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

See the LICENSE file for the full license.

datacite.yml
Title Dataset of cortical activity recorded with high spatial resolution from anesthetized rats
Authors Horváth,Csaba;Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience and Psychology, Research Centre for Natural Sciences, Eötvös Loránd Research Network, Budapest, Hungary;ORCID:0000-0001-8176-8975
Tóth,Lili Fanni;Faculty of Information Technology and Bionics, Pázmány Péter Catholic University, Budapest, Hungary
Ulbert,István;Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience and Psychology, Research Centre for Natural Sciences, Eötvös Loránd Research Network, Budapest, Hungary and Faculty of Information Technology and Bionics, Pázmány Péter Catholic University, Budapest, Hungary;ORCID:0000-0001-9941-9159
Fiáth,Richárd;Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience and Psychology, Research Centre for Natural Sciences, Eötvös Loránd Research Network, Budapest, Hungary and Faculty of Information Technology and Bionics, Pázmány Péter Catholic University, Budapest, Hungary;ORCID:0000-0001-8732-2691
Description Publicly available neural recordings obtained with high spatial resolution are scarce. Here, we present an electrophysiological dataset recorded from the neocortex of twenty rats anesthetized with ketamine/xylazine. The wideband, spontaneous recordings were acquired with a single-shank silicon-based probe having 128 densely packed recording sites arranged in a 32x4 array. The dataset contains the activity of a total of 7126 sorted single units extracted from all layers of the cortex. Here, we share raw neural recordings, as well as spike times, extracellular spike waveforms and several properties of units packaged in a standardized electrophysiological data format. For technical validation of our dataset, we provide the distributions of derived single unit properties along with various spike sorting quality metrics.
License CC-BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
References Fiáth, R., Raducanu, B. C., Musa, S., Andrei, A., Lopez, C. M., van Hoof, C., Ruther, P., Aarts, A., Horváth, D., Ulbert, I. (2018) A silicon-based neural probe with densely-packed low-impedance titanium nitride microelectrodes for ultrahigh-resolution in vivo recordings. Biosensors and Bioelectronics 106: 86-92. [doi:10.1016/j.bios.2018.01.060] (IsDescribedBy)
Funding Hungarian Brain Research Program; 2017-1.2.1-NKP-2017-00002
Hungarian National Research, Development and Innovation Office; PD124175
Hungarian National Research, Development and Innovation Office; PD134196
Hungarian National Research, Development and Innovation Office; TUDFO/51757-1/2019-ITM
Keywords Neuroscience
Silicon probe
High density recording
High spatial resolution
Electrophysiology
Neurophysiology
Neural recording
Extracellular action potential
Single unit activity
Spike sorting
Slow oscillation
Slow wave activity
Rat
Ketamine/xylazine anesthesia
Neocortex
Resource Type Dataset