3.9 Article

Supercritical dynamics at the edge-of-chaos underlies optimal decision-making

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICS-COMPLEXITY
Volume 2, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/2632-072X/ac3ad2

Keywords

supercriticality; edge-of-chaos; attractor model

Funding

  1. European Commission Horizon 2020 Grant Virtual Brain Cloud [826421]
  2. FI-AGAUR scholarship from the Generalitat de Catalunya

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Through the attractor model of the canonical cortical circuit, it was found that an increase in the SST+/PV+ ratio leads to the emergence of persistent activity, with the optimal sensitivity found at the edge of chaos. Furthermore, the study indicates that both the optimal SST+/PV+ ratio and the region of the phase transition decrease monotonically with increasing input noise.
Critical dynamics, characterized by scale-free neuronal avalanches, is thought to underlie optimal function in the sensory cortices by maximizing information transmission, capacity, and dynamic range. In contrast, deviations from criticality have not yet been considered to support any cognitive processes. Nonetheless, neocortical areas related to working memory and decision-making seem to rely on long-lasting periods of ignition-like persistent firing. Such firing patterns are reminiscent of supercritical states where runaway excitation dominates the circuit dynamics. In addition, a macroscopic gradient of the relative density of Somatostatin (SST+) and Parvalbumin (PV+) inhibitory interneurons throughout the cortical hierarchy has been suggested to determine the functional specialization of low- versus high-order cortex. These observations thus raise the question of whether persistent activity in high-order areas results from the intrinsic features of the neocortical circuitry. We used an attractor model of the canonical cortical circuit performing a perceptual decision-making task to address this question. Our model reproduces the known saddle-node bifurcation where persistent activity emerges, merely by increasing the SST+/PV+ ratio while keeping the input and recurrent excitation constant. The regime beyond such a phase transition renders the circuit increasingly sensitive to random fluctuations of the inputs-i.e., chaotic-, defining an optimal SST+/PV+ ratio around the edge-of-chaos. Further, we show that both the optimal SST+/PV+ ratio and the region of the phase transition decrease monotonically with increasing input noise. This suggests that cortical circuits regulate their intrinsic dynamics via inhibitory interneurons to attain optimal sensitivity in the face of varying uncertainty. Hence, on the one hand, we link the emergence of supercritical dynamics at the edge-of-chaos to the gradient of the SST+/PV+ ratio along the cortical hierarchy, and, on the other hand, explain the behavioral effects of the differential regulation of SST+ and PV+ interneurons by acetylcholine in the presence of input uncertainty.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

3.9
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available