Network Structure Governs Drosophila Brain Functionality
Xiaoyu Zhang, Pengcheng Yang, Jiawei Feng, Qiang Luo, Wei Lin, Xin, Lu

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that the structure of the Drosophila brain network largely determines neural activation patterns, highlighting the importance of topology over neuron complexity in brain function.
Contribution
We developed a computational framework using real connectome data to show network topology's dominant role in neural activation, challenging neuron-centric views.
Findings
Network structure governs activation patterns across models.
Visual and olfactory systems are largely separated at the network level.
Network distance influences activation more than physical distance.
Abstract
How intelligence emerges from living beings has been a fundamental question in neuroscience. However, it remains largely unanswered due to the complex neuronal dynamics and intricate connections between neurons in real neural systems. To address this challenge, we leveraged the largest available adult Drosophila connectome data set, and constructed a comprehensive computational framework based on simplified neuronal activation mechanisms to simulate the observed activation behavior within the connectome. The results revealed that even with rudimentary neuronal activation mechanisms, models grounded in real neural network structures can generate activation patterns strikingly similar to those observed in the actual brain. A significant discovery was the consistency of activation patterns across various neuronal dynamic models. This consistency, achieved with the same network structure,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFunctional Brain Connectivity Studies · Neural dynamics and brain function
