Abstract
AbstractRhythmical cortical activity has long been recognized as a pillar in the architecture of brain functions. Yet, the dynamic organization of its underlying neuronal population activity remains elusive. Here we uncover a unique organizational principle regulating collective neural dynamics associated with the alpha rhythm in the awake resting-state. We demonstrate that cascades of neural activity obey attenuation-amplification dynamics (AAD), with a transition from the attenuation regime—within alpha cycles—to the amplification regime—across a few alpha cycles—that correlates with the characteristic frequency of the alpha rhythm. We find that this short-term AAD is part of a large-scale, size-dependent temporal structure of neural cascades that obeys the Omori law: Following large cascades, smaller cascades occur at a rate that decays as a power-law of the time elapsed from such events—a long-term AAD regulating brain activity over the timescale of seconds. We show that such an organization corresponds to the “waxing and waning” of the alpha rhythm. Importantly, we observe that short- and long-term AAD are unique to the awake resting-state, being absent during NREM sleep. These results provide a quantitative, dynamical description of the so-far-qualitative notion of the “waxing and waning” phenomenon, and suggest the AAD as a key principle governing resting-state dynamics across timescales.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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