Statistical modeling of adaptive neural networks explains co-existence of avalanches and oscillations in resting human brain

Lombardi F, Pepic S, Shriki O, Tkačik G, De Martino D. 2023. Statistical modeling of adaptive neural networks explains co-existence of avalanches and oscillations in resting human brain. Nature Computational Science. 3, 254–263.

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Abstract
Neurons in the brain are wired into adaptive networks that exhibit collective dynamics as diverse as scale-specific oscillations and scale-free neuronal avalanches. Although existing models account for oscillations and avalanches separately, they typically do not explain both phenomena, are too complex to analyze analytically or intractable to infer from data rigorously. Here we propose a feedback-driven Ising-like class of neural networks that captures avalanches and oscillations simultaneously and quantitatively. In the simplest yet fully microscopic model version, we can analytically compute the phase diagram and make direct contact with human brain resting-state activity recordings via tractable inference of the model’s two essential parameters. The inferred model quantitatively captures the dynamics over a broad range of scales, from single sensor oscillations to collective behaviors of extreme events and neuronal avalanches. Importantly, the inferred parameters indicate that the co-existence of scale-specific (oscillations) and scale-free (avalanches) dynamics occurs close to a non-equilibrium critical point at the onset of self-sustained oscillations.
Publishing Year
Date Published
2023-03-20
Journal Title
Nature Computational Science
Publisher
Springer Nature
Acknowledgement
This research was funded in whole, or in part, by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) (grant no. PT1013M03318 to F.L. and no. P34015 to G.T.). For the purpose of open access, the author has applied a CC BY public copyright licence to any Author Accepted Manuscript version arising from this submission. The study was supported by the European Union Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie action (grant agreement No. 754411 to F.L.).
Volume
3
Page
254-263
eISSN
IST-REx-ID

Cite this

Lombardi F, Pepic S, Shriki O, Tkačik G, De Martino D. Statistical modeling of adaptive neural networks explains co-existence of avalanches and oscillations in resting human brain. Nature Computational Science. 2023;3:254-263. doi:10.1038/s43588-023-00410-9
Lombardi, F., Pepic, S., Shriki, O., Tkačik, G., & De Martino, D. (2023). Statistical modeling of adaptive neural networks explains co-existence of avalanches and oscillations in resting human brain. Nature Computational Science. Springer Nature. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43588-023-00410-9
Lombardi, Fabrizio, Selver Pepic, Oren Shriki, Gašper Tkačik, and Daniele De Martino. “Statistical Modeling of Adaptive Neural Networks Explains Co-Existence of Avalanches and Oscillations in Resting Human Brain.” Nature Computational Science. Springer Nature, 2023. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43588-023-00410-9.
F. Lombardi, S. Pepic, O. Shriki, G. Tkačik, and D. De Martino, “Statistical modeling of adaptive neural networks explains co-existence of avalanches and oscillations in resting human brain,” Nature Computational Science, vol. 3. Springer Nature, pp. 254–263, 2023.
Lombardi F, Pepic S, Shriki O, Tkačik G, De Martino D. 2023. Statistical modeling of adaptive neural networks explains co-existence of avalanches and oscillations in resting human brain. Nature Computational Science. 3, 254–263.
Lombardi, Fabrizio, et al. “Statistical Modeling of Adaptive Neural Networks Explains Co-Existence of Avalanches and Oscillations in Resting Human Brain.” Nature Computational Science, vol. 3, Springer Nature, 2023, pp. 254–63, doi:10.1038/s43588-023-00410-9.
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2023-08-16
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