Biophysically grounded mean-field models of neural populations under electrical stimulation

被引:0
|
作者
Cakan, Caglar [1 ,2 ]
Obermayer, Klaus [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Tech Univ Berlin, Dept Software Engn & Theoret Comp Sci, Berlin, Germany
[2] Bernstein Ctr Computat Neurosci Berlin, Berlin, Germany
关键词
SPARSELY CONNECTED NETWORKS; NEURONAL POPULATIONS; BIFURCATION-ANALYSIS; PYRAMIDAL NEURONS; OSCILLATIONS; DYNAMICS; BRAIN; COMMUNICATION; CONDUCTANCE; SENSITIVITY;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pcbi.1007822; 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1007822.r001; 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1007822.r002; 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1007822.r003; 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1007822.r004; 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1007822.r005; 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1007822.r006
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Electrical stimulation of neural systems is a key tool for understanding neural dynamics and ultimately for developing clinical treatments. Many applications of electrical stimulation affect large populations of neurons. However, computational models of large networks of spiking neurons are inherently hard to simulate and analyze. We evaluate a reduced mean-field model of excitatory and inhibitory adaptive exponential integrate-and-fire (AdEx) neurons which can be used to efficiently study the effects of electrical stimulation on large neural populations. The rich dynamical properties of this basic cortical model are described in detail and validated using large network simulations. Bifurcation diagrams reflecting the network's state reveal asynchronous up- and down-states, bistable regimes, and oscillatory regions corresponding to fast excitation-inhibition and slow excitation-adaptation feedback loops. The biophysical parameters of the AdEx neuron can be coupled to an electric field with realistic field strengths which then can be propagated up to the population description. We show how on the edge of bifurcation, direct electrical inputs cause network state transitions, such as turning on and off oscillations of the population rate. Oscillatory input can frequency-entrain and phase-lock endogenous oscillations. Relatively weak electric field strengths on the order of 1 V/m are able to produce these effects, indicating that field effects are strongly amplified in the network. The effects of time-varying external stimulation are well-predicted by the mean-field model, further underpinning the utility of low-dimensional neural mass models. Author summary Weak electrical inputs to the brain in vivo using transcranial electrical stimulation or in isolated cortex in vitro can affect the dynamics of the underlying neural populations. However, it is poorly understood what the exact mechanisms are that modulate the activity of neural populations as a whole and why the responses are so diverse in stimulation experiments. Despite this, electrical stimulation techniques are being developed for the treatment of neurological diseases in humans. To better understand these interactions, it is often necessary to simulate and analyze very large networks of neurons, which can be computationally demanding. In this theoretical paper, we present a reduced model of coupled neural populations that represents a piece of cortical tissue. This efficient model retains the dynamical properties of the large network of neurons it is based on while being several orders of magnitude faster to simulate. Due to the biophysical properties of the neuron model, an electric field can be coupled to the population. We show that weak electric fields often used in stimulation experiments can lead to entrainment of neural oscillations on the population level, and argue that the responses critically depend on the dynamical state of the neural system.
引用
收藏
页数:30
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Exact mean-field models for spiking neural networks with adaptation
    Chen, Liang
    Campbell, Sue Ann
    JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL NEUROSCIENCE, 2022, 50 (04) : 445 - 469
  • [2] Coherence resonance in neuronal populations: Mean-field versus network model
    Baspinar, Emre
    Schuelen, Leonhard
    Olmi, Simona
    Zakharova, Anna
    PHYSICAL REVIEW E, 2021, 103 (03)
  • [3] Firing pattern of bursting neurons under sinusoidal drive in mean-field modeling
    Wu, H.
    Kim, J. W.
    Robinson, P. A.
    Drysdale, P. M.
    JOURNAL OF THEORETICAL BIOLOGY, 2009, 259 (01) : 101 - 108
  • [4] Mean-field inference methods for neural networks
    Gabrie, Marylou
    JOURNAL OF PHYSICS A-MATHEMATICAL AND THEORETICAL, 2020, 53 (22)
  • [5] Mean-field models of populations of quadratic integrate-and-fire neurons with noise on the basis of the circular cumulant approach
    Goldobin, Denis S.
    CHAOS, 2021, 31 (08) : 1ENG
  • [6] Coherence Resonance in Random Erdos-Renyi Neural Networks: Mean-Field Theory
    Hutt, A.
    Wahl, T.
    Voges, N.
    Hausmann, Jo
    Lefebvre, J.
    FRONTIERS IN APPLIED MATHEMATICS AND STATISTICS, 2021, 7
  • [7] Simulated Tempering and Swapping on Mean-Field Models
    Bhatnagar, Nayantara
    Randall, Dana
    JOURNAL OF STATISTICAL PHYSICS, 2016, 164 (03) : 495 - 530
  • [8] NNMT: Mean-Field Based Analysis Tools for Neuronal Network Models
    Layer, Moritz
    Senk, Johanna
    Essink, Simon
    van Meegen, Alexander
    Bos, Hannah
    Helias, Moritz
    FRONTIERS IN NEUROINFORMATICS, 2022, 16
  • [9] MEAN-FIELD AND KINETIC DESCRIPTIONS OF NEURAL DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS
    Herty, Michael
    Trimborn, Torsten
    Visconti, Giuseppe
    FOUNDATIONS OF DATA SCIENCE, 2022, 4 (02): : 271 - 298
  • [10] Biologically Realistic Mean-Field Models of Conductance-Based Networks of Spiking Neurons with Adaptation
    di Volo, Matteo
    Romagnoni, Alberto
    Capone, Cristiano
    Destexhe, Alain
    NEURAL COMPUTATION, 2019, 31 (04) : 653 - 680