Dynamic Compression Flows for Neuroscience Data
Ganchao Wei, Daniela F De Albuquerque, Miles Martinez, Shiyang Pan, John Pearson
ICML 2026 regular
Abstract (source: OpenReview · © authors)
While neuroscience experiments have repeatedly demonstrated the involvement of large populations of neurons in even simple behaviors, these studies have just as often reported that the collective dynamics of neural activity are approximately low-dimensional. As a result, methods for identifying low-dimensional latent representations of time series data have become increasingly prominent in neuroscience. However, most existing methods either ignore temporal structure or model time evolution using latent dynamical systems approaches. In the first case, dynamics may be distorted or even scrambled in the latent space, while in the second, many possible latent dynamics may give rise to the same data. Here, we address these challenges using a novel flow-matching approach in which data are generated by a pair of flow fields, one governing time evolution, the other a mapping between data and a low-dimensional latent space. Importantly, the dimension-reducing flow is trained to minimize distortions of the temporal dynamics, learning an identifiable low-dimensional representation that preserves temporal relations in the original data. Additionally, we constrain our latent spaces to have low-dimensional support in a soft, parameterized manner, taking inspiration from ideas on nested dropout. Across both neural and behavioral data, we show that this dual flow approach produces both more interpretable dynamics and higher-quality reconstructions than competing models, including in noise-dominated data sets where conventional approaches fail.
Keywords
Metadata from BioTender-max/icml2026-ai-bio (CC0-1.0). Phở does not host any PDF; links point back to the source.
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