4.8 Article

Neuronal long-range temporal correlations and avalanche dynamics are correlated with behavioral scaling laws

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1216855110

关键词

spontaneous activity; threshold detection; criticality

资金

  1. Academy of Finland [253130, 256472, 1126967]
  2. University of Helsinki
  3. Sigrid Juselius Foundation
  4. Centre for International Mobility CIMO
  5. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) Physical Sciences [612.001.123]
  6. Academy of Finland (AKA) [256472, 256472] Funding Source: Academy of Finland (AKA)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Scale-free fluctuations are ubiquitous in behavioral performance and neuronal activity. In time scales from seconds to hundreds of seconds, psychophysical dynamics and the amplitude fluctuations of neuronal oscillations are governed by power-law-form long-range temporal correlations (LRTCs). In millisecond time scales, neuronal activity comprises cascade-like neuronal avalanches that exhibit, power-law size and lifetime distributions. However, it remains unknown whether these neuronal scaling laws are correlated with those characterizing behavioral performance or whether neuronal LRTCs and avalanches are related. Here, we show that the neuronal scaling laws are strongly correlated both with each other and with behavioral scaling laws. We used source reconstructed magneto- and electroencephalographic recordings to characterize the dynamics of ongoing cortical activity. We found robust power-law scaling in neuronal LRTCs and avalanches in resting-state data and during the performance of audiovisual threshold stimulus detection tasks. The LRTC scaling exponents of the behavioral performance fluctuations were correlated with those of concurrent neuronal avalanches and LRTCs in anatomically identified brain systems. The behavioral exponents also were correlated with neuronal scaling laws derived from a resting-state condition and with a similar anatomical topography. Finally, despite the difference in time scales, the scaling exponents of neuronal LRTCs and avalanches were strongly correlated during both rest and task performance. Thus, long and short time-scale neuronal dynamics are related and functionally significant at the behavioral level. These data suggest that the temporal structures of human cognitive fluctuations and behavioral variability stem from the scaling laws of individual and intrinsic brain dynamics.

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