Leaders of neuronal cultures in a quorum percolation model
J.-P. Eckmann, Elisha Moses, Olav Stetter, Tsvi Tlusty, Cyrille, Zbinden

TL;DR
This paper develops a quorum-percolation model to describe how activity initiates and spreads in neuronal cultures, highlighting the role of highly connected 'leader' neurons in early activation and burst growth.
Contribution
It introduces a theoretical framework linking in-degree distributions to neuronal activation dynamics, emphasizing the significance of 'leader' neurons in culture activity.
Findings
High in-degree neurons act as leaders initiating activity
Growth rate of active neurons fits a model with Gaussian and power-law tail distributions
Distribution of in-degree influences the dynamics of neuronal burst propagation
Abstract
We present a theoretical framework using quorum-percolation for describing the initiation of activity in a neural culture. The cultures are modeled as random graphs, whose nodes are excitatory neurons with kin inputs and kout outputs, and whose input degrees kin = k obey given distribution functions pk. We examine the firing activity of the population of neurons according to their input degree (k) classes and calculate for each class its firing probability \Phi_k(t) as a function of t. The probability of a node to fire is found to be determined by its in-degree k, and the first-to-fire neurons are those that have a high k. A small minority of high-k classes may be called "Leaders", as they form an inter-connected subnetwork that consistently fires much before the rest of the culture. Once initiated, the activity spreads from the Leaders to the less connected majority of the culture. We…
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