Cooperativity, information gain, and energy cost during early LTP in dendritic spines
Jan Karbowski, Paulina Urban

TL;DR
This study models the energy and information dynamics during early LTP in dendritic spines, revealing that learning is energy-intensive and that synaptic cooperativity influences memory duration and efficiency.
Contribution
It introduces a stochastic thermodynamics framework with a pair approximation to analyze energy and information during LTP in coupled dendritic spines, highlighting the role of synaptic cooperativity.
Findings
Maximum information gain and energy occur during initial stimulation.
Positive synaptic cooperativity extends memory duration and energy cost.
Sparse stimulation optimizes information retention and energy efficiency.
Abstract
We investigate a mutual relationship between information and energy during early phase of LTP induction and maintenance in a large-scale system of mutually coupled dendritic spines, with discrete internal states and probabilistic dynamics, within the framework of nonequilibrium stochastic thermodynamics. In order to analyze this computationally intractable stochastic multidimensional system, we introduce a pair approximation, which allows us to reduce the spine dynamics into a lower dimensional manageable system of closed equations. It is found that the rates of information gain and energy attain their maximal values during an initial period of LTP (i.e. during stimulation), and after that they recover to their baseline low values, as opposed to a memory trace that lasts much longer. This suggests that learning phase is much more energy demanding than the memory phase. We show that…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
