Modular architecture facilitates noise-driven control of synchrony in neuronal networks
Sci. Adv. 9, eade1755 (2023) Brain functions require both segregated processing of information in specialized circuits, as well as integration across circuits to perform high-level information processing. One possible way to implement these seemingly opposing demands is by flexibly switching between...
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Zusammenfassung: | Sci. Adv. 9, eade1755 (2023) Brain functions require both segregated processing of information in
specialized circuits, as well as integration across circuits to perform
high-level information processing. One possible way to implement these
seemingly opposing demands is by flexibly switching between synchronous and
less synchronous states. Understanding how complex synchronization patterns are
controlled by the interaction of network architecture and external
perturbations is thus a central challenge in neuroscience, but the mechanisms
behind such interactions remain elusive. Here, we utilise precision
neuroengineering to manipulate cultured neuronal networks and show that a
modular architecture facilitates desynchronization upon asynchronous
stimulation, making external noise a control parameter of synchrony. Using
spiking neuron models, we then demonstrate that external noise can reduce the
level of available synaptic resources, which make intermodular interactions
more stochastic and thereby facilitates the breakdown of synchrony. Finally,
the phenomenology of stochastic intermodular interactions is formulated into a
mesoscopic model that incorporates a state-dependent gating mechanism for
signal propagation. Taken together, our results demonstrate a network mechanism
by which asynchronous inputs tune the inherent dynamical state in structured
networks of excitable units. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2205.10563 |