1. Hierarchical gradients of multiple timescales in the mammalian forebrain.
- Author
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Song M, Shin EJ, Seo H, Soltani A, Steinmetz NA, Lee D, Jung MW, and Paik SB
- Subjects
- Animals, Mice, Rats, Time Factors, Male, Thalamus physiology, Prosencephalon physiology
- Abstract
Many anatomical and physiological features of cortical circuits, ranging from the biophysical properties of synapses to the connectivity patterns among different neuron types, exhibit consistent variation along the hierarchical axis from sensory to association areas. Notably, the temporal correlation of neural activity at rest, known as the intrinsic timescale, increases systematically along this hierarchy in both primates and rodents, analogous to the increasing scale and complexity of spatial receptive fields. However, how the timescales for task-related activity vary across brain regions and whether their hierarchical organization appears consistently across different mammalian species remain unexplored. Here, we show that both the intrinsic timescale and those of task-related activity follow a similar hierarchical gradient in the cortices of monkeys, rats, and mice. We also found that these timescales covary similarly in both the cortex and basal ganglia, whereas the timescales of thalamic activity are shorter than cortical timescales and do not conform to the hierarchical order predicted by their cortical projections. These results suggest that the hierarchical gradient of cortical timescales might represent a universal feature of intracortical circuits in the mammalian brain., Competing Interests: Competing interests statement:The authors declare no competing interest.
- Published
- 2024
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