Abstract
AbstractCortical slow oscillations (≲ 1 Hz) are a hallmark of slow-wave sleep and deep anesthesia across animal species. They arise from spatiotemporal patterns of activity with low degree of complexity, eventually increasing as wakefulness is approached and cognitive functions emerge. The arousal process is then an open window on the widely unknown mechanisms underlying the emergence of the dynamical richness of awake cortical networks. Here, we investigated the changes in the network dynamics as anesthesia fades out and wakefulness is approached in layer 5 neuronal assemblies of the rat visual cortex. Far from being a continuum, this transition displays both gradual and abrupt activity changes. Starting from deep anesthesia, slow oscillations increase their frequency eventually expressing maximum regularity. This stage is followed by the abrupt onset of an infra-slow (~ 0.2 Hz) alternation between sleep-like oscillations and activated states. A population rate model reproduces this transition driven by an increased excitability that brings it to periodically cross a critical point. We conclude that dynamical richness emerges as a competition between two metastable attractor states whose existence is here experimentally confirmed.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
8 articles.
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