You are here: Home / News / BCCN Munich News / Unsupervised spike-sorting with convolutive ICA - new publication by Leibig et al.

Unsupervised spike-sorting with convolutive ICA - new publication by Leibig et al.

Christian Leibig, Thomas Wachtler, and Günther Zeck


Read the full publication here (free access until end of August).

Here we present a spike sorting algorithm based on convolutive ICA (cICA) to retrieve a larger number of accurately sorted neurons than with instantaneous ICA while accounting for signal overlaps. Spike sorting was applied to datasets with varying signal-to-noise ratios (SNR: 3–12) and 27% spike overlaps, sampled at either 11.5 or 23 kHz on 4365 electrodes.

We demonstrate how the instantaneity assumption in ICA-based algorithms has to be relaxed in order to improve the spike sorting performance for high-density microelectrode array recordings. Reformulating the convolutive mixture as an instantaneous mixture by modeling several delayed samples jointly is necessary to increase signal-to-noise ratio. Our results emphasize that different cICA algorithms are not equivalent.

Spike sorting performance was assessed with ground-truth data generated from experimentally derived templates. The presented spike sorter was able to extract ≈90% of the true spike trains with an error rate below 2%. It was superior to two alternative (c)ICA methods (≈80% accurately sorted neurons) and comparable to a supervised sorting.

Our new algorithm represents a fast solution to overcome the current bottleneck in spike sorting of large datasets generated by simultaneous recording with thousands of electrodes.


Filed under: