Broadly heterogeneous network topology begets order-based representation by privileged neurons
Christoph Bauermeister, Hanna Keren, Jochen Braun

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that broadly heterogeneous network topology fosters the emergence of pioneer neurons that encode external stimuli through firing order, enhancing the network's representational capacity in unstructured spiking models.
Contribution
It introduces a minimal model showing how heterogeneous connectivity promotes pioneer neurons and their role in encoding stimuli, aligning with experimental observations.
Findings
Heterogeneous topology increases pioneer neurons.
Pioneer neurons reliably encode external stimuli.
Heterogeneity enhances network's representational capacity.
Abstract
How spiking activity reverberates through neuronal networks, how evoked and spontaneous activity interact and blend, and how the combined activities represent external stimulation are pivotal questions in neuroscience. We simulated minimal models of unstructured spiking networks in silico, asking whether and how gentle external stimulation might be subsequently reflected in spontaneous activity fluctuations. Consistent with earlier findings in silico and in vitro, we observe a privileged sub-population of 'pioneer neurons' that, by their firing order, reliably encode previous external stimulation. We show that the distinctive role of pioneer neurons is owed to a combination of exceptional sensitivity to, and pronounced influence on, network activity. We further show that broadly heterogeneous connection topology - a broad "middle class" in degree of connectedness - not only increases…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeural dynamics and brain function · Advanced Memory and Neural Computing · Photoreceptor and optogenetics research
