TY - JOUR T1 - Identification of cellular-activity dynamics across large tissue volumes in the mammalian brain JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/132688 SP - 132688 AU - Logan Grosenick AU - Michael Broxton AU - Christina K. Kim AU - Conor Liston AU - Ben Poole AU - Samuel Yang AU - Aaron Andalman AU - Edward Scharff AU - Noy Cohen AU - Ofer Yizhar AU - Charu Ramakrishnan AU - Surya Ganguli AU - Patrick Suppes AU - Marc Levoy AU - Karl Deisseroth Y1 - 2017/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/05/01/132688.abstract N2 - Tracking the coordinated activity of cellular events through volumes of intact tissue is a major challenge in biology that has inspired significant technological innovation. Yet scanless measurement of the high-speed activity of individual neurons across three dimensions in scattering mammalian tissue remains an open problem. Here we develop and validate a computational imaging approach (SWIFT) that integrates high-dimensional, structured statistics with light field microscopy to allow the synchronous acquisition of single-neuron resolution activity throughout intact tissue volumes as fast as a camera can capture images (currently up to 100 Hz at full camera resolution), attaining rates needed to keep pace with emerging fast calcium and voltage sensors. We demonstrate that this large field-of-view, single-snapshot volume acquisition method—which requires only a simple and inexpensive modification to a standard fluorescence microscope—enables scanless capture of coordinated activity patterns throughout mammalian neural volumes. Further, the volumetric nature of SWIFT also allows fast in vivo imaging, motion correction, and cell identification throughout curved subcortical structures like the dorsal hippocampus, where cellular-resolution dynamics spanning hippocampal subfields can be simultaneously observed during a virtual context learning task in a behaving animal. SWIFT’s ability to rapidly and easily record from volumes of many cells across layers opens the door to widespread identification of dynamical motifs and timing dependencies among coordinated cell assemblies during adaptive, modulated, or maladaptive physiological processes in neural systems. ER -