Neural avalanches at the critical point between replay and non-replay of spatiotemporal patterns.

We model spontaneous cortical activity with a network of coupled spiking units, in which multiple spatio-temporal patterns are stored as dynamical attractors. We introduce an order parameter, which measures the overlap (similarity) between the activity of the network and the stored patterns. We find...

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Main Authors: Silvia Scarpetta, Antonio de Candia
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3688722?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-03379e4d3bb445a989b5c29c3b1ffb502020-11-24T21:17:54ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0186e6416210.1371/journal.pone.0064162Neural avalanches at the critical point between replay and non-replay of spatiotemporal patterns.Silvia ScarpettaAntonio de CandiaWe model spontaneous cortical activity with a network of coupled spiking units, in which multiple spatio-temporal patterns are stored as dynamical attractors. We introduce an order parameter, which measures the overlap (similarity) between the activity of the network and the stored patterns. We find that, depending on the excitability of the network, different working regimes are possible. For high excitability, the dynamical attractors are stable, and a collective activity that replays one of the stored patterns emerges spontaneously, while for low excitability, no replay is induced. Between these two regimes, there is a critical region in which the dynamical attractors are unstable, and intermittent short replays are induced by noise. At the critical spiking threshold, the order parameter goes from zero to one, and its fluctuations are maximized, as expected for a phase transition (and as observed in recent experimental results in the brain). Notably, in this critical region, the avalanche size and duration distributions follow power laws. Critical exponents are consistent with a scaling relationship observed recently in neural avalanches measurements. In conclusion, our simple model suggests that avalanche power laws in cortical spontaneous activity may be the effect of a network at the critical point between the replay and non-replay of spatio-temporal patterns.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3688722?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Silvia Scarpetta
Antonio de Candia
spellingShingle Silvia Scarpetta
Antonio de Candia
Neural avalanches at the critical point between replay and non-replay of spatiotemporal patterns.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Silvia Scarpetta
Antonio de Candia
author_sort Silvia Scarpetta
title Neural avalanches at the critical point between replay and non-replay of spatiotemporal patterns.
title_short Neural avalanches at the critical point between replay and non-replay of spatiotemporal patterns.
title_full Neural avalanches at the critical point between replay and non-replay of spatiotemporal patterns.
title_fullStr Neural avalanches at the critical point between replay and non-replay of spatiotemporal patterns.
title_full_unstemmed Neural avalanches at the critical point between replay and non-replay of spatiotemporal patterns.
title_sort neural avalanches at the critical point between replay and non-replay of spatiotemporal patterns.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description We model spontaneous cortical activity with a network of coupled spiking units, in which multiple spatio-temporal patterns are stored as dynamical attractors. We introduce an order parameter, which measures the overlap (similarity) between the activity of the network and the stored patterns. We find that, depending on the excitability of the network, different working regimes are possible. For high excitability, the dynamical attractors are stable, and a collective activity that replays one of the stored patterns emerges spontaneously, while for low excitability, no replay is induced. Between these two regimes, there is a critical region in which the dynamical attractors are unstable, and intermittent short replays are induced by noise. At the critical spiking threshold, the order parameter goes from zero to one, and its fluctuations are maximized, as expected for a phase transition (and as observed in recent experimental results in the brain). Notably, in this critical region, the avalanche size and duration distributions follow power laws. Critical exponents are consistent with a scaling relationship observed recently in neural avalanches measurements. In conclusion, our simple model suggests that avalanche power laws in cortical spontaneous activity may be the effect of a network at the critical point between the replay and non-replay of spatio-temporal patterns.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3688722?pdf=render
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AT antoniodecandia neuralavalanchesatthecriticalpointbetweenreplayandnonreplayofspatiotemporalpatterns
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