Thermodynamic constraints on neural dimensions, firing rates, brain temperature and size
Jan Karbowski

TL;DR
This paper explores how thermodynamic principles constrain brain size, wiring, temperature, and firing rates, revealing limits on neural activity and implications for mammalian brain evolution.
Contribution
It provides a theoretical framework linking neural firing rates, brain temperature, and size, highlighting physical constraints on brain architecture and function.
Findings
Brain temperature depends biphasically on firing frequency.
Very small fibers and brains face thermal and metabolic limits.
Larger brains tend to operate with slower neural activity.
Abstract
There have been suggestions that heat caused by cerebral metabolic activity may constrain mammalian brain evolution, architecture, and function. This article investigates physical limits on brain wiring and corresponding changes in brain temperature that are imposed by thermodynamics of heat balance determined mainly by Na/K-ATPase, cerebral blood flow, and heat conduction. It is found that even moderate firing rates cause significant intracellular Na build-up, and the ATP consumption rate associated with pumping out these ions grows nonlinearly with frequency. Surprisingly, the power dissipated by the Na/K pump depends biphasically on frequency, which can lead to the biphasic dependence of brain temperature on frequency as well. Both the total power of sodium pumps and brain temperature diverge for very small fiber diameters, indicating that too thin…
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