4.6 Article

Network resonance can be generated independently at distinct levels of neuronal organization

Journal

PLOS COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY
Volume 18, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1010364

Keywords

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Funding

  1. CRCNS grant from the United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation, Jerusalem, Israel [2015577]
  2. United States National Science Foundation [CRCNS-DMS1608077, IOS-2002863]
  3. Israel Science Foundation [638/16, 2558/18]
  4. ERC [679253]
  5. Zimin Institute
  6. European Research Council (ERC) [679253] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Resonance is the maximal response of a neuronal system to periodic inputs in a limited frequency band. This study investigates how network resonance is generated and how it depends on the properties of network building blocks. The researchers find that network resonance can be inherited from resonances at other levels of organization or be intrinsically generated by combining mechanisms across distinct levels. At all levels of organization, interactions between low- and high-pass filters generate the observed resonance.
Resonance is defined as maximal response of a system to periodic inputs in a limited frequency band. Resonance may serve to optimize inter-neuronal communication, and has been observed at multiple levels of neuronal organization. However, it is unknown how neuronal resonance observed at the network level is generated and how network resonance depends on the properties of the network building blocks. Here, we first develop a metric for quantifying spike timing resonance in the presence of background noise, extending the notion of spiking resonance for in vivo experiments. Using conductance-based models, we find that network resonance can be inherited from resonances at other levels of organization, or be intrinsically generated by combining mechanisms across distinct levels. Resonance of membrane potential fluctuations, postsynaptic potentials, and single neuron spiking can each be generated independently of resonance at any other level and be propagated to the network level. At all levels of organization, interactions between processes that give rise to low- and high-pass filters generate the observed resonance. Intrinsic network resonance can be generated by the combination of filters belonging to different levels of organization. Inhibition-induced network resonance can emerge by inheritance from resonance of membrane potential fluctuations, and be sharpened by presynaptic high-pass filtering. Our results demonstrate a multiplicity of qualitatively different mechanisms that can generate resonance in neuronal systems, and provide analysis tools and a conceptual framework for the mechanistic investigation of network resonance in terms of circuit components, across levels of neuronal organization.

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