Effect of Spike-Timing-Dependent Plasticity on Stochastic Burst Synchronization in A Scale-Free Neuronal Network
Sang-Yoon Kim, Woochang Lim

TL;DR
This study explores how spike-timing-dependent plasticity (STDP) influences stochastic burst synchronization in a scale-free neuronal network, revealing a transition from smooth to step-like synchronization changes and highlighting the role of network architecture and different STDP models.
Contribution
It demonstrates the impact of additive and multiplicative STDP on burst synchronization in scale-free networks, including the emergence of a rapid transition and the effects of network topology.
Findings
STDP causes a step-like transition in burst synchronization.
Long-term potentiation improves synchronization, while depression worsens it.
Network architecture influences the effects of STDP on synchronization.
Abstract
We consider an excitatory population of subthreshold Izhikevich neurons which cannot fire spontaneously without noise. As the coupling strength passes a threshold, individual neurons exhibit noise-induced burstings. This neuronal population has adaptive dynamic synaptic strengths governed by the spike-timing-dependent plasticity (STDP). In the absence of STDP, stochastic burst synchronization (SBS) between noise-induced burstings of subthreshold neurons was previously found to occur over a large range of intermediate noise intensities. Here, we study the effect of additive STDP on the SBS by varying the noise intensity in the Barab\'asi-Albert scale-free network (SFN) for the case of symmetric preferential attachment. This type of SFN exhibits a power-law degree distribution, and hence it becomes an inhomogeneous one with a few "hubs" (i.e., super-connected nodes). Occurrence of a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeural dynamics and brain function · stochastic dynamics and bifurcation · Advanced Memory and Neural Computing
