Self-Organized Criticality in the Brain
Dietmar Plenz, Tiago L. Ribeiro, Stephanie R. Miller, Patrick A., Kells, Ali Vakili, Elliott L. Capek (Section on Critical Brain Dynamics,, National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of Health, USA)

TL;DR
This paper reviews evidence that the mammalian cortex exhibits self-organized criticality, with scale-invariant neuronal avalanches and complex dynamical motifs emerging autonomously in cortical layers.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of experimental findings demonstrating SOC in cortical preparations, highlighting the mechanisms and conditions that support critical brain dynamics.
Findings
Neuronal avalanches follow a power law with slope -3/2.
SOC dynamics are observed in superficial cortical layers.
Dissociated cultures lack SOC features.
Abstract
Self-organized criticality (SOC) refers to the ability of complex systems to evolve towards a 2nd-order phase transition at which interactions between system components lead to scale-invariant events beneficial for system performance. For the last two decades, considerable experimental evidence accumulated that the mammalian cortex with its diversity in cell types and connections might exhibit SOC. Here we review experimental findings of isolated, layered cortex preparations to self-organize towards four dynamical motifs identified in the cortex in vivo: up-states, oscillations, neuronal avalanches, and coherence potentials. During up-states, the synchronization observed for nested theta/gamma-oscillations embeds scale-invariant neuronal avalanches that exhibit robust power law scaling in size with a slope of -3/2 and a critical branching parameter of 1. This dynamical coordination,…
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