RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Functional connectivity with short-term dynamics explains diverse patterns of excitatory spike transmission in vivo JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 475178 DO 10.1101/475178 A1 Abed Ghanbari A1 Naixin Ren A1 Christian Keine A1 Carl Stoelzel A1 Bernhard Englitz A1 Harvey A. Swadlow A1 Ian H. Stevenson YR 2018 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/11/23/475178.abstract AB Fast information transmission in neural networks is heavily influenced by short-term synaptic plasticity (STP), and the type and timescale of STP varies by cell-type and brain region. Although STP has been widely characterized in vitro from recordings of postsynaptic potentials or currents, characterizing STP in in vivo in behaving animals is difficult due to the lack of large-scale intracellular recordings. Here, we use paired extracellular observations to estimate the short-term dynamics of synaptic transmission from spikes alone. We introduce an augmented generalized linear model (GLM) that includes a dynamic functional connection as well as several, non-synaptic factors that alter spike transmission probability. Our model captures the diverse short-term dynamics of in vivo spike transmission at identified synapses and accurately captures the effects of local pre- and postsynaptic spike patterns. We applied this model to large-scale multi-electrode recordings to describe stimulus-dependent shifts in spike transmission and cell-type specific differences in STP.