Nature Communications (Dec 2023)

Blazed oblique plane microscopy reveals scale-invariant inference of brain-wide population activity

  • Maximilian Hoffmann,
  • Jörg Henninger,
  • Johannes Veith,
  • Lars Richter,
  • Benjamin Judkewitz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-43741-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Due to the size and opacity of vertebrate brains, it has until now been impossible to simultaneously record neuronal activity at cellular resolution across the entire adult brain. As a result, scientists are forced to choose between cellular-resolution microscopy over limited fields-of-view or whole-brain imaging at coarse-grained resolution. Bridging the gap between these spatial scales of understanding remains a major challenge in neuroscience. Here, we introduce blazed oblique plane microscopy to perform brain-wide recording of neuronal activity at cellular resolution in an adult vertebrate. Contrary to common belief, we find that inferences of neuronal population activity are near-independent of spatial scale: a set of randomly sampled neurons has a comparable predictive power as the same number of coarse-grained macrovoxels. Our work thus links cellular resolution with brain-wide scope, challenges the prevailing view that macroscale methods are generally inferior to microscale techniques and underscores the value of multiscale approaches to studying brain-wide activity.