ArXiv TLDR

Modeling of Self-sustained Neuron Population without External Stimulus

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2604.13719

İhsan Ertuğrul Karakaş, Özden Özel, İlkay Ulusoy, Orhan Murat Koçak

cs.NEq-bio.NC

TLDR

Hodgkin-Huxley neuron networks with STDP and stochasticity can sustain long-duration, sparse, irregular autonomous activity after brief initial stimulation.

Key contributions

  • Modeled recurrent Hodgkin-Huxley network with STDP, probabilistic synapses, and receptor variability.
  • Demonstrated long-duration (up to 1800s) self-sustained, sparse, irregular activity post-brief stimulus.
  • Observed low mean firing rates (~1.13 Hz) and Fano factors near 1-2, consistent with irregular spiking.
  • Network activity exhibited spontaneous qualitative reorganizations in collective firing patterns.

Why it matters

This paper addresses a fundamental question in neuroscience: how self-sustained activity emerges in biophysically grounded models. It demonstrates that recurrent Hodgkin-Huxley networks with plasticity and stochasticity can maintain autonomous activity, advancing our understanding of brain dynamics without external input.

Original Abstract

Self-sustained neural activity in the absence of ongoing external input is a fundamental feature of nervous system dynamics, yet the conditions under which it can emerge in biophysically grounded network models remain incompletely understood. We studied whether a recurrent network of Hodgkin-Huxley neurons with spike-timing-dependent plasticity and intrinsic stochasticity can maintain autonomous activity after brief transient stimulation. The simulated network comprised 200 neurons (160 excitatory, 40 inhibitory) with 80% connection probability, incorporating excitatory and inhibitory STDP, probabilistic vesicle release, probabilistic synapse formation, receptor variability, and voltage-dependent inhibition. After a brief 200 ms initialization stimulus to 30 excitatory neurons, the network received no further external input. In one 1800 s simulation and two additional 500 s simulations, the network maintained sparse, irregular activity without ongoing drive. In the 1800 s run, 67% of neurons exhibited mean firing rates below 1 Hz, the population mean firing rate was 1.13 +/- 1.34 Hz, participation increased across longer observation windows, and population-mean Fano factors remained near 1-2, consistent with irregular spike timing. Raster activity also showed spontaneous qualitative reorganizations in collective firing patterns over time. These findings suggest that recurrent Hodgkin-Huxley networks with plastic and stochastic synapses can sustain long-duration autonomous activity in a sparse firing regime after brief initialization.

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