Optimal input reverberation and homeostatic self-organization towards the edge of synchronization

Published in arXiv:2402.05032 [nlin.AO], 2024

Recommended citation: Sue Rhâmidda, Mauricio Girardi-Schappo, Osame Kinouchi (2024): Optimal input reverberation and homeostatic self-organization towards the edge of synchronization. arXiv:2402.05032 [nlin.AO] . https://dx.doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2402.05032

Transient or partial synchronization can be used to do computations, although a fully synchronized network is frequently related to epileptic seizures. Here, we propose a homeostatic mechanism that is capable of maintaining a neuronal network at the edge of a synchronization transition, thereby avoiding the harmful consequences of a fully synchronized network. We model neurons by maps since they are dynamically richer than integrate-and-fire models and more computationally efficient than conductance-based approaches. We first describe the synchronization phase transition of a dense network of neurons with different tonic spiking frequencies coupled by gap junctions. We show that at the transition critical point, inputs optimally reverberate through the network activity through transient synchronization. Then, we introduce a local homeostatic dynamic in the synaptic coupling and show that it produces a robust self-organization toward the edge of this phase transition. We discuss the potential biological consequences of this self-organization process, such as its relation to the Brain Criticality hypothesis, its input processing capacity, and how its malfunction could lead to pathological synchronization.