Cortical Entropy, Mutual Information and Scale-Free Dynamics in Waking Mice

Erik D. Fagerholm(Hammersmith Hospital), Gregory Scott(Hammersmith Hospital), Woodrow L. Shew(University of Arkansas at Fayetteville), Chenchen Song(Imperial College London), Robert Leech(Hammersmith Hospital), Thomas Knöpfel(Imperial College London), David Sharp(Hammersmith Hospital)
Cerebral Cortex
July 6, 2016
Cited by 103Open Access
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Abstract

Some neural circuits operate with simple dynamics characterized by one or a few well-defined spatiotemporal scales (e.g. central pattern generators). In contrast, cortical neuronal networks often exhibit richer activity patterns in which all spatiotemporal scales are represented. Such "scale-free" cortical dynamics manifest as cascades of activity with cascade sizes that are distributed according to a power-law. Theory and in vitro experiments suggest that information transmission among cortical circuits is optimized by scale-free dynamics. In vivo tests of this hypothesis have been limited by experimental techniques with insufficient spatial coverage and resolution, i.e., restricted access to a wide range of scales. We overcame these limitations by using genetically encoded voltage imaging to track neural activity in layer 2/3 pyramidal cells across the cortex in mice. As mice recovered from anesthesia, we observed three changes: (a) cortical information capacity increased, (b) information transmission among cortical regions increased and (c) neural activity became scale-free. Our results demonstrate that both information capacity and information transmission are maximized in the awake state in cortical regions with scale-free network dynamics.


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