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Abstract
Neuroscience needs observation. Observation lets us evaluate data quality, judge whether models are biologically realistic, and generate new hypotheses. However, high-dimensional behavioral and neural data are too complex to be easily displayed and eye-tested. Computational methods can reduce the dimensionality of data and reveal statistically robust dynamical structure but often yield results that are difficult to relate back to the underlying biology. In addition, the choice of what parameters to quantify may not capture unexpectedly relevant aspects of the data. To supplement quantification with enhanced qualitative observation, we developed Visualization and Sonification of NeuroData (ViSoND), an open-source approach for displaying multiple data streams using video and sonification. Sonification is nothing new to neuroscience. Scientists have sonified their physiological preparations since Lord Adrian’s earliest recordings. We extend this tradition by mapping multiple physiological datastreams to musical notes using MIDI. Synchronizing MIDI to video provides an opportunity to watch an animal’s movement while listening to physiological signals such as action potentials. Here we provide two demonstrations of this approach. First, we used ViSoND to interpret behavioral structure revealed by a computational model trained on the breathing rhythms of freely behaving mice. Second, ViSoND revealed patterns of neural activity in mouse visual cortex corresponding to eye blinks, events that were previously filtered out of analysis. These use cases show that ViSoND can supplement quantitative rigor with observational interpretability. Additionally, ViSoND provides an accessible way to display data which may broaden the audience for communication of neuroscientific findings.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
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