Neuronal functional connectivity among multiple areas of the rat somatosensory system during spontaneous and evoked activities
Antonio G. Zippo, Riccardo Storchi, Giuliana Gelsomino, Sara Nencini,, Gian Carlo Caramenti, Maurizio Valente, Gabriele E. M. Biella

TL;DR
This study investigates the small-world network organization of neuronal functional connectivity across multiple rat somatosensory brain regions during spontaneous and stimulated activities, revealing persistent small-world properties and dynamic reconfigurations.
Contribution
It demonstrates that neuronal functional connectivity exhibits small-world organization at the microscopic level and how it dynamically changes with sensory stimulation across different brain regions.
Findings
Spikes and LFPs show small-world network organization during spontaneous activity.
Sensory stimulation causes reconfiguration but preserves small-worldness.
Inter-area LFP connections increase significantly after stimulation.
Abstract
Small-World Networks (SWNs) represent a fundamental model for the comprehension of many complex man-made and biological networks. In the central nervous system, SWN models have been shown to fit well both anatomical and functional maps at the macroscopic level. However the functional microscopic level, where the nodes of a network are composed of single neurons, is still poorly understood. At this level, although recent evidences suggest that functional connectivity maps exhibit small-world organization, it is not known whether and how these maps, distributed in multiple brain regions, change across different conditions. We addressed these questions by simultaneous multi-array extracellular recordings in three brain regions diversely involved in somatosensory information processing: the ventropostero-lateral thalamic nuclei (VPL), the primary somatosensory cortex (S1) and the…
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