Avian Sleep Group, Max Planck Institute for Ornithology, Eberhard-Gwinner-Strasse 11, 82319 Seewiesen, Germany.
BMC Biol. 2014 Feb 28;12:16. doi: 10.1186/1741-7007-12-16.
In mammals, the slow-oscillations of neuronal membrane potentials (reflected in the electroencephalogram as high-amplitude, slow-waves), which occur during non-rapid eye movement sleep and anesthesia, propagate across the neocortex largely as two-dimensional traveling waves. However, it remains unknown if the traveling nature of slow-waves is unique to the laminar cytoarchitecture and associated computational properties of the neocortex.
We demonstrate that local field potential slow-waves and correlated multiunit activity propagate as complex three-dimensional plumes of neuronal activity through the avian brain, owing to its non-laminar, nuclear neuronal cytoarchitecture.
The traveling nature of slow-waves is not dependent upon the laminar organization of the neocortex, and is unlikely to subserve functions unique to this pattern of neuronal organization. Finally, the three-dimensional geometry of propagating plumes may reflect computational properties not found in mammals that contributed to the evolution of nuclear neuronal organization and complex cognition in birds.
在哺乳动物中,神经元膜电位的慢振荡(在脑电图中表现为高振幅、慢波)在非快速眼动睡眠和麻醉期间发生,主要以二维行波的形式在新皮层中传播。然而,慢波的行波性质是否仅具有新皮层的层状细胞结构和相关的计算特性,目前尚不清楚。
我们证明,由于鸟类大脑的非层状核神经元细胞结构,局部场电位慢波和相关的多单位活动以复杂的三维神经元活动羽流的形式传播。
慢波的行波性质不依赖于新皮层的层状组织,不太可能发挥这种神经元组织模式特有的功能。最后,传播羽流的三维几何形状可能反映了哺乳动物中没有发现的计算特性,这些特性有助于核神经元组织和鸟类复杂认知的进化。