Can a time varying external drive give rise to apparent criticality in neural systems?
Neurons
0303 health sciences
Time Factors
QH301-705.5
Models, Neurological
Action Potentials
Brain
Electroencephalography
Haplorhini
03 medical and health sciences
Animals
Humans
Macaca
Poisson Distribution
Biology (General)
Nerve Net
Research Article
DOI:
10.1371/journal.pcbi.1006081
Publication Date:
2018-05-29T17:38:00Z
AUTHORS (2)
ABSTRACT
The finding of power law scaling in neural recordings lends support to the hypothesis of critical brain dynamics. However, power laws are not unique to critical systems and can arise from alternative mechanisms. Here, we investigate whether a common time-varying external drive to a set of Poisson units can give rise to neuronal avalanches and exhibit apparent criticality. To this end, we analytically derive the avalanche size and duration distributions, as well as additional measures, first for homogeneous Poisson activity, and then for slowly varying inhomogeneous Poisson activity. We show that homogeneous Poisson activity cannot give rise to power law distributions. Inhomogeneous activity can also not generate perfect power laws, but it can exhibit approximate power laws with cutoffs that are comparable to those typically observed in experiments. The mechanism of generating apparent criticality by time-varying external fields, forces or input may generalize to many other systems like dynamics of swarms, diseases or extinction cascades. Here, we illustrate the analytically derived effects for spike recordings in vivo and discuss approaches to distinguish true from apparent criticality. Ultimately, this requires causal interventions, which allow separating internal system properties from externally imposed ones.
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