Strength of Correlations in Strongly Recurrent Neuronal Networks

Spatiotemporal correlations in brain activity are functionally important and have been implicated in perception, learning and plasticity, exploratory behavior, and various aspects of cognition. Neurons in the cerebral cortex are strongly interacting. Their activity is temporally irregular and can ex...

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Main Authors: Ran Darshan, Carl van Vreeswijk, David Hansel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Physical Society 2018-09-01
Series:Physical Review X
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.8.031072
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spelling doaj-d3c2297ec3b247f998443e4ae544a9312020-11-25T00:21:13ZengAmerican Physical SocietyPhysical Review X2160-33082018-09-018303107210.1103/PhysRevX.8.031072Strength of Correlations in Strongly Recurrent Neuronal NetworksRan DarshanCarl van VreeswijkDavid HanselSpatiotemporal correlations in brain activity are functionally important and have been implicated in perception, learning and plasticity, exploratory behavior, and various aspects of cognition. Neurons in the cerebral cortex are strongly interacting. Their activity is temporally irregular and can exhibit substantial correlations. However, how the collective dynamics of highly recurrent and strongly interacting neurons can evolve into a state in which the activity of individual cells is highly irregular yet macroscopically correlated is an open question. Here, we develop a general theory that relates the strength of pairwise correlations to the anatomical features of networks of strongly coupled neurons. To this end, we investigate networks of binary units. When interactions are strong, the activity is irregular in a large region of parameter space. We find that despite the strong interactions, the correlations are generally very weak. Nevertheless, we identify architectural features, which if present, give rise to strong correlations without destroying the irregularity of the activity. For networks with such features, we determine how correlations scale with the network size and the number of connections. Our work shows the mechanism by which strong correlations can be consistent with highly irregular activity, two hallmarks of neuronal dynamics in the central nervous system.http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.8.031072
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ran Darshan
Carl van Vreeswijk
David Hansel
spellingShingle Ran Darshan
Carl van Vreeswijk
David Hansel
Strength of Correlations in Strongly Recurrent Neuronal Networks
Physical Review X
author_facet Ran Darshan
Carl van Vreeswijk
David Hansel
author_sort Ran Darshan
title Strength of Correlations in Strongly Recurrent Neuronal Networks
title_short Strength of Correlations in Strongly Recurrent Neuronal Networks
title_full Strength of Correlations in Strongly Recurrent Neuronal Networks
title_fullStr Strength of Correlations in Strongly Recurrent Neuronal Networks
title_full_unstemmed Strength of Correlations in Strongly Recurrent Neuronal Networks
title_sort strength of correlations in strongly recurrent neuronal networks
publisher American Physical Society
series Physical Review X
issn 2160-3308
publishDate 2018-09-01
description Spatiotemporal correlations in brain activity are functionally important and have been implicated in perception, learning and plasticity, exploratory behavior, and various aspects of cognition. Neurons in the cerebral cortex are strongly interacting. Their activity is temporally irregular and can exhibit substantial correlations. However, how the collective dynamics of highly recurrent and strongly interacting neurons can evolve into a state in which the activity of individual cells is highly irregular yet macroscopically correlated is an open question. Here, we develop a general theory that relates the strength of pairwise correlations to the anatomical features of networks of strongly coupled neurons. To this end, we investigate networks of binary units. When interactions are strong, the activity is irregular in a large region of parameter space. We find that despite the strong interactions, the correlations are generally very weak. Nevertheless, we identify architectural features, which if present, give rise to strong correlations without destroying the irregularity of the activity. For networks with such features, we determine how correlations scale with the network size and the number of connections. Our work shows the mechanism by which strong correlations can be consistent with highly irregular activity, two hallmarks of neuronal dynamics in the central nervous system.
url http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.8.031072
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