Quasi-universal scaling in mouse-brain neuronal activity stems from edge-of-instability critical dynamics
Quasi-universal scaling in mouse-brain neuronal activity stems from edge-of-instability critical dynamics
Abstract The brain is in a state of perpetual reverberant neural activity, even in the absence of specific tasks or stimuli. Shedding light on the origin and functional significance of such activity is essential to understanding how the brain transmits, processes, and stores information. An inspiring, albeit controversial, conjecture proposes that some statistical characteristics of empirically observed neuronal activity can be understood by assuming that brain networks operate in a dynamical regime near the edge of a phase transition. Moreover, the resulting critical behavior, with its concomitant scale invariance, is assumed to carry crucial functional advantages. Here, we present a data-driven analysis based on simultaneous high-throughput recordings of the activity of thousands of individual neurons in various regions of the mouse brain. To analyze these data, we construct a unified theoretical framework that synergistically combines cutting-edge methods for the study of brain activity (such as a phenomenological renormalization group approach and techniques that infer the general dynamical state of a neural population), while designing complementary tools. This unified approach allows us to uncover strong signatures of scale invariance that is “quasi-universal” across brain regions and reveal that these areas operate, to a greater or lesser extent, at the edge of instability. Furthermore, this framework allows us to distinguish between quasi-universal background activity and non-universal input-related activity. Taken together, the following study provides strong evidence that brain networks actually operate in a critical regime which, among other functional advantages, provides them with a scale-invariant substrate of activity in which optimal input representations can be sustained.
Di Santo Serena、Morales Guillermo B.、Mu?oz Miguel A.
Center for Theoretical Neuroscience, Mortimer B. Zuckerman Mind Brain Behavior Institute, Columbia UniversityDepartamento de Electromagnetismo y F¨asica de la Materia and Instituto Carlos I de F¨asica Te¨?rica y Computacional. Universidad de GranadaDepartamento de Electromagnetismo y F¨asica de la Materia and Instituto Carlos I de F¨asica Te¨?rica y Computacional. Universidad de Granada
生物科学理论、生物科学方法生物科学研究方法、生物科学研究技术物理学
CriticalityScalingNeural dynamicsRenormalization GroupNeural representations
Di Santo Serena,Morales Guillermo B.,Mu?oz Miguel A..Quasi-universal scaling in mouse-brain neuronal activity stems from edge-of-instability critical dynamics[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-05-15].https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.11.23.469734.点此复制
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