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Deconstructing scale-free neuronal avalanches: behavioral transitions and neuronal response

Authors :
Jörn Davidsen
Davor Curic
Aaron J. Gruber
Ingrid M. Esteves
Victorita E. Ivan
David T Cuesta
Majid H. Mohajerani
Source :
Journal of Physics: Complexity. 2:045010
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
IOP Publishing, 2021.

Abstract

Observations of neurons in a resting brain and neurons in cultures often display spontaneous scale-free (SF) collective dynamics in the form of information cascades, also called ‘neuronal avalanches’. This has motivated the so called critical brain hypothesis which posits that the brain is self-tuned to a critical point or regime, separating exponentially-growing dynamics from quiescent states, to achieve optimality. Yet, how such optimality of information transmission is related to behavior and whether it persists under behavioral transitions has remained a fundamental knowledge gap. Here, we aim to tackle this challenge by studying behavioral transitions in mice using two-photon calcium imaging of the retrosplenial cortex (RSC)—an area of the brain well positioned to integrate sensory, mnemonic, and cognitive information by virtue of its strong connectivity with the hippocampus, medial prefrontal cortex, and primary sensory cortices. Our work shows that the response of the underlying neural population to behavioral transitions can vary significantly between different sub-populations such that one needs to take the structural and functional network properties of these sub-populations into account to understand the properties at the total population level. Specifically, we show that the RSC contains at least one sub-population capable of switching between two different SF regimes, indicating an intricate relationship between behavior and the optimality of neuronal response at the subgroup level. This asks for a potential reinterpretation of the emergence of self-organized criticality in neuronal systems.

Details

ISSN :
2632072X
Volume :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Physics: Complexity
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........bd21bc6c378ee41117b27e2e2804f222