UP-DOWN cortical dynamics reflect state transitions in a bistable network.

Publication date

2024-03-05T09:48:09Z

2024-03-05T09:48:09Z

2017-08-04

2024-01-26T13:55:36Z

Abstract

In the idling brain, neuronal circuits transition between periods of sustained firing (UP state) and quiescence (DOWN state), a pattern the mechanisms of which remain unclear. Here we analyzed spontaneous cortical population activity from anesthetized rats and found that UP and DOWN durations were highly variable and that population rates showed no significant decay during UP periods. We built a network rate model with excitatory (E) and inhibitory (I) populations exhibiting a novel bistable regime between a quiescent and an inhibition-stabilized state of arbitrarily low rate. Fluctuations triggered state transitions, while adaptation in E cells paradoxically caused a marginal decay of E-rate but a marked decay of I-rate in UP periods, a prediction that we validated experimentally. A spiking network implementation further predicted that DOWN-to-UP transitions must be caused by synchronous high-amplitude events. Our findings provide evidence of bistable cortical networks that exhibit non-rhythmic state transitions when the brain rests.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.7554/elife.22425

Elife, 2017, vol. 6

https://doi.org/10.7554/elife.22425

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Rights

cc by (c) Jercog, Daniel et al., 2017

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/