4.8 Article

Criticality between Cortical States

期刊

PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS
卷 122, 期 20, 页码 -

出版社

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.122.208101

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资金

  1. high-performance computing facilities of NPAD/UFRN
  2. CAPES [88887.131435/2016-00, PROEX 534/2018, 23038.003382/2018-39]
  3. FACEPE [APQ 0826-1.05/15]
  4. CNPq [310712/2014-9, 301744/2018-1, 425329/2018-6, 308775/2015-5, 249991/2013-6, 408145/2016-1]
  5. FAPESP Research, Innovation and Dissemination Center for Neuromathematics (S. Paulo Research Foundation) [2013/07699-0]
  6. FCT [SFRH/BD/51992/2012, SFRH/BD/98675/2013]
  7. PAC-MEDPERSYST Project [POCI-01-0145-FEDER-016428]
  8. FCT Investigator Fellowship [IF/00883/2013]
  9. BIAL Foundation [30/2016]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Since the first measurements of neuronal avalanches, the critical brain hypothesis has gained traction. However, if the brain is critical, what is the phase transition? For several decades, it has been known that the cerebral cortex operates in a diversity of regimes, ranging from highly synchronous states (with higher spiking variability) to desynchronized states (with lower spiking variability). Here, using both new and publicly available data, we test independent signatures of criticality and show that a phase transition occurs in an intermediate value of spiking variability, in both anesthetized and freely moving animals. The critical exponents point to a universality class different from mean-field directed percolation. Importantly, as the cortex hovers around this critical point, the avalanche exponents follow a linear relation that encompasses previous experimental results from different setups and is reproduced by a model.

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