Theta-gamma cross-frequency coupling enables covariance between distant brain regions
Akihiko Akao, Sho Shirasaka, Yasuhiko Jimbo, Bard Ermentrout and, Kiyoshi Kotani

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that inter-regional conduction delays can generate cross-frequency coupling in brain networks, influencing spike synchronization and neural communication across distant regions.
Contribution
It introduces a mean field model with delay differential equations showing delay-induced CFC via bifurcation analysis, linking conduction delays to neural synchronization mechanisms.
Findings
Conduction delay alone can produce CFC through a torus bifurcation.
Local clusters show gamma-band synchronization with decorrelated firing within populations.
Long-range gamma-band cross-covariance occurs between distant clusters with similar firing frequencies.
Abstract
Cross-frequency coupling (CFC) is thought to play an important role in communication across distant brain regions. However, neither the mechanism of its generation nor the influence on the underlying spiking dynamics is well understood. Here, we investigate the dynamics of two interacting distant neuronal modules coupled by inter-regional long-range connections. Each neuronal module comprises an excitatory and inhibitory population of quadratic integrate-and-fire neurons connected locally with conductance-based synapses. The two modules are coupled reciprocally with delays that represent the long-range conduction time. We applied the Ott-Antonsen ansatz to reduce the spiking dynamics to the corresponding mean field equations as a small set of delay differential equations. Bifurcation analysis on these mean field equations shows inter-regional conduction delay is sufficient to produce…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeural dynamics and brain function · Photoreceptor and optogenetics research · stochastic dynamics and bifurcation
