Ribeiro Tiago L, Chialvo Dante R, Plenz Dietmar
Section on Critical Brain Dynamics, National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, United States.
Center for Complex Systems and Brain Sciences (CEMSC3), Instituto de Ciencias Físicas, (ICIFI) Escuela de Ciencia y Tecnología, Universidad Nacional de San Martín (UNSAM), Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Front Syst Neurosci. 2021 Jan 20;14:591210. doi: 10.3389/fnsys.2020.591210. eCollection 2020.
Collective phenomena fascinate by the emergence of order in systems composed of a myriad of small entities. They are ubiquitous in nature and can be found over a vast range of scales in physical and biological systems. Their key feature is the seemingly effortless emergence of adaptive collective behavior that cannot be trivially explained by the properties of the system's individual components. This perspective focuses on recent insights into the similarities of correlations for two apparently disparate phenomena: flocking in animal groups and neuronal ensemble activity in the brain. We first will summarize findings on the spontaneous organization in bird flocks and macro-scale human brain activity utilizing correlation functions and insights from critical dynamics. We then will discuss recent experimental findings that apply these approaches to the collective response of neurons to visual and motor processing, i.e., to local perturbations of neuronal networks at the meso- and microscale. We show how scale-free correlation functions capture the collective organization of neuronal avalanches in evoked neuronal populations in nonhuman primates and between neurons during visual processing in rodents. These experimental findings suggest that the coherent collective neural activity observed at scales much larger than the length of the direct neuronal interactions is demonstrative of a phase transition and we discuss the experimental support for either discontinuous or continuous phase transitions. We conclude that at or near a phase-transition neuronal information can propagate in the brain with similar efficiency as proposed to occur in the collective adaptive response observed in some animal groups.
集体现象因无数小实体组成的系统中秩序的出现而引人入胜。它们在自然界中无处不在,在物理和生物系统的广泛尺度上都能找到。其关键特征是看似毫不费力地出现适应性集体行为,而这种行为不能简单地用系统单个组件的属性来解释。本文将聚焦于近期对两种明显不同现象相关性的见解:动物群体中的集群行为和大脑中的神经元集合活动。我们首先将利用相关函数和临界动力学的见解,总结鸟类集群中的自发组织以及宏观尺度上人类大脑活动的研究结果。然后,我们将讨论最近的实验发现,这些发现将这些方法应用于神经元对视觉和运动处理的集体反应,即中尺度和微尺度上神经元网络的局部扰动。我们展示了无标度相关函数如何捕捉非人类灵长类动物诱发神经元群体中神经元雪崩的集体组织以及啮齿动物视觉处理过程中神经元之间的集体组织。这些实验发现表明,在比直接神经元相互作用长度大得多的尺度上观察到的连贯集体神经活动表明存在相变,我们将讨论关于不连续或连续相变的实验支持。我们得出结论,在相变点或接近相变点时,神经元信息在大脑中的传播效率与在某些动物群体中观察到的集体适应性反应中所提出的传播效率相似。