Phase transition in the economically modeled growth of a cellular nervous system
Vincenzo Nicosia, Petra E. V\'ertes, William R. Schafer, Vito Latora,, Edward T. Bullmore

TL;DR
This paper investigates the growth dynamics of the C. elegans nervous system, revealing a phase transition in connection growth driven by economical trade-offs between wiring cost and network topology during development.
Contribution
It introduces a dynamic economical model explaining the transition in neural network growth and its correlation with developmental stages, supported by empirical data from C. elegans.
Findings
Identifies a phase transition in neural connection growth at hatching.
Shows the growth transition is driven by cost-topology trade-offs.
Demonstrates the model reproduces adult nervous system organization.
Abstract
Spatially-embedded complex networks, such as nervous systems, the Internet and transportation networks, generally have non-trivial topological patterns of connections combined with nearly minimal wiring costs. However the growth rules shaping these economical trade-offs between cost and topology are not well understood. Here we study the cellular nervous system of the nematode worm C. elegans, together with information on the birth times of neurons and on their spatial locations. We find that the growth of this network undergoes a transition from an accelerated to a constant increase in the number of links (synaptic connections) as a function of the number of nodes (neurons). The time of this phase transition coincides closely with the observed moment of hatching, when development switches metamorphically from oval to larval stages. We use graph analysis and generative modelling to show…
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