Literature DB >> 33615098

Dynamic core-periphery structure of information sharing networks in entorhinal cortex and hippocampus.

Nicola Pedreschi1, Christophe Bernard2, Wesley Clawson2, Pascale Quilichini2, Alain Barrat1, Demian Battaglia2.   

Abstract

Neural computation is associated with the emergence, reconfiguration, and dissolution of cell assemblies in the context of varying oscillatory states. Here, we describe the complex spatiotemporal dynamics of cell assemblies through temporal network formalism. We use a sliding window approach to extract sequences of networks of information sharing among single units in hippocampus and entorhinal cortex during anesthesia and study how global and node-wise functional connectivity properties evolve through time and as a function of changing global brain state (theta vs. slow-wave oscillations). First, we find that information sharing networks display, at any time, a core-periphery structure in which an integrated core of more tightly functionally interconnected units links to more loosely connected network leaves. However the units participating to the core or to the periphery substantially change across time windows, with units entering and leaving the core in a smooth way. Second, we find that discrete network states can be defined on top of this continuously ongoing liquid core-periphery reorganization. Switching between network states results in a more abrupt modification of the units belonging to the core and is only loosely linked to transitions between global oscillatory states. Third, we characterize different styles of temporal connectivity that cells can exhibit within each state of the sharing network. While inhibitory cells tend to be central, we show that, otherwise, anatomical localization only poorly influences the patterns of temporal connectivity of the different cells. Furthermore, cells can change temporal connectivity style when the network changes state. Altogether, these findings reveal that the sharing of information mediated by the intrinsic dynamics of hippocampal and entorhinal cortex cell assemblies have a rich spatiotemporal structure, which could not have been identified by more conventional time- or state-averaged analyses of functional connectivity.
© 2020 Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cell assemblies; Dynamic functional connectivity; Entorhinal cortex; Hippocampus; Information theory; Temporal networks

Year:  2020        PMID: 33615098      PMCID: PMC7888487          DOI: 10.1162/netn_a_00142

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Netw Neurosci        ISSN: 2472-1751


  1 in total

1.  A novel dynamic network imaging analysis method reveals aging-related fragmentation of cortical networks in mouse.

Authors:  Daniel A Llano; Chihua Ma; Umberto Di Fabrizio; Aynaz Taheri; Kevin A Stebbings; Georgiy Yudintsev; Gang Xiao; Robert V Kenyon; Tanya Y Berger-Wolf
Journal:  Netw Neurosci       Date:  2021-06-21
  1 in total

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