Detecting Multiple Change Points Using Adaptive Regression Splines With Application to Neural Recordings

Open access
Date
2018-10-04Type
- Journal Article
Abstract
Time series, as frequently the case in neuroscience, are rarely stationary, but often exhibit abrupt changes due to attractor transitions or bifurcations in the dynamical systems producing them. A plethora of methods for detecting such change points in time series statistics have been developed over the years, in addition to test criteria to evaluate their significance. Issues to consider when developing change point analysis methods include computational demands, difficulties arising from either limited amount of data or a large number of covariates, and arriving at statistical tests with sufficient power to detect as many changes as contained in potentially high-dimensional time series. Here, a general method called Paired Adaptive Regressors for Cumulative Sum is developed for detecting multiple change points in the mean of multivariate time series. The method's advantages over alternative approaches are demonstrated through a series of simulation experiments. This is followed by a real data application to neural recordings from rat medial prefrontal cortex during learning. Finally, the method's flexibility to incorporate useful features from state-of-the-art change point detection techniques is discussed, along with potential drawbacks and suggestions to remedy them. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000302273Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Frontiers in NeuroinformaticsVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
Frontiers Research FoundationSubject
change point; cumulative sum; adaptive regression splines; nonstationary; bootstrap test; blockpermutation; behavior; spike countsMore
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