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Neural Manifold Explorer

Dataset:

Drag the sliders to select neurons inside an axis-aligned box in embedding space (dims 0/1/2, independent of DC pair display).

Use the first three sliders to position the seed point, then adjust the radius.

0.050

Select the top-N% of neurons ranked by a functional property.

Selected: 0 neurons
Select neurons and click "Plot PSTHs ▶" to display responses.

About the Explorer

The Neural Manifold Explorer lets you examine how a neural population represents visual motion stimuli. It combines two views of the same population:

Selecting neurons. Use the tabs to define a subpopulation:

Fraction sweep (Metric tab, appears after Run): Shows how two population-level metrics change as neurons are progressively removed, keeping only the top-ranked fraction. Dark blue = high-ranked neurons; light blue = low-ranked; grey dashed = random subsampling baseline (± 1 s.d. shaded). The x-axis is inverted so the full population (fraction = 1) is on the left.

A curve that stays high at small fractions means that property identifies the most informative neurons.

PSTHs. After selecting neurons, click Update Decoding ↻ to re-compute the decoding manifold for the subpopulation, or Plot PSTHs ▶ to display response heatmaps. For ≤ 5 neurons, individual per-neuron strips are shown; for larger groups, the population-averaged heatmap is displayed.

Activity over time. Select activity from the Color by dropdown to animate the encoding manifold by neural activity. Each neuron's color reflects its response to the selected stimulus at the current time frame, mapped to a viridis colorscale (dark purple = low, yellow = high), normalised across the population at each frame. Use the Stim dropdown to choose which stimulus is shown (and Dir for datasets with multiple motion directions). Drag the time slider to inspect a specific frame, or click ▶ Play to animate at 8 fps. This view lets you directly read off which region of the encoding manifold is most active at stimulus onset, during the sustained response, or at offset — and how those active sub-populations shift over time.