Fast photostimulus optimization for holographic control of neural ensemble activity in vivo
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Determining the intricate structure and function of neural circuits requires the ability to precisely manipulate circuit activity. Two-photon holographic optogenetics has emerged as a powerful tool for achieving this via flexible excitation of user-defined neural ensembles. However, the precision of two-photon optogenetics has been constrained by off-target stimulation, an effect where proximal non-target neurons can be unintentionally activated due to imperfect spatial confinement of light onto target neurons. Here, we introduce a real-time computational approach to mitigating off-target stimulation by first empirically sampling each neuron’s sensitivity to stimulation at proximal locations, and then optimizing stimulation sites using a fast, interpretable model based on adaptive non-negative basis function regression (NBFR). NBFR is highly scalable, completing model fitting for hundreds of neurons in just a few seconds and then optimizing stimulation sites in several hundred milliseconds per stimulus – fast enough for most closed-loop behavioral experiments. We characterize the performance of our approach in both simulations and in vivo experiments in mouse hippocampus, showing its efficacy under realistic experimental conditions. Our results thus establish NBFR-based photostimulus optimization as an important addition to an emerging computational toolkit for scalable precision optogenetics.