Litcius/Paper detail

Navigating the Statistical Minefield of Model Selection and Clustering in Neuroscience

B. Király, Balázs Hangya

2022eNeuro12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Model selection is often implicit: when performing an ANOVA, one assumes that the normal distribution is a good model of the data; fitting a tuning curve implies that an additive and a multiplicative scaler describes the behavior of the neuron; even calculating an average implicitly assumes that the data were sampled from a distribution that has a finite first statistical moment: the mean. Model selection may be explicit, when the aim is to test whether one model provides a better description of the data than a competing one. As a special case, clustering algorithms identify groups with similar properties within the data. They are widely used from spike sorting to cell type identification to gene expression analysis. We discuss model selection and clustering techniques from a statistician's point of view, revealing the assumptions behind, and the logic that governs the various approaches. We also showcase important neuroscience applications and provide suggestions how neuroscientists could put model selection algorithms to best use as well as what mistakes should be avoided.

Topics & Concepts

Selection (genetic algorithm)Cluster analysisModel selectionComputer scienceComputational neuroscienceData scienceNeurosciencePsychologyArtificial intelligenceNeural dynamics and brain functionFunctional Brain Connectivity StudiesGene Regulatory Network Analysis