Frontiers in Network Physiology (Aug 2024)

How synaptic function controls critical transitions in spiking neuron networks: insight from a Kuramoto model reduction

  • Lev A. Smirnov,
  • Vyacheslav O. Munyayev,
  • Maxim I. Bolotov,
  • Grigory V. Osipov,
  • Igor Belykh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnetp.2024.1423023
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4

Abstract

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The dynamics of synaptic interactions within spiking neuron networks play a fundamental role in shaping emergent collective behavior. This paper studies a finite-size network of quadratic integrate-and-fire neurons interconnected via a general synaptic function that accounts for synaptic dynamics and time delays. Through asymptotic analysis, we transform this integrate-and-fire network into the Kuramoto-Sakaguchi model, whose parameters are explicitly expressed via synaptic function characteristics. This reduction yields analytical conditions on synaptic activation rates and time delays determining whether the synaptic coupling is attractive or repulsive. Our analysis reveals alternating stability regions for synchronous and partially synchronous firing, dependent on slow synaptic activation and time delay. We also demonstrate that the reduced microscopic model predicts the emergence of synchronization, weakly stable cyclops states, and non-stationary regimes remarkably well in the original integrate-and-fire network and its theta neuron counterpart. Our reduction approach promises to open the door to rigorous analysis of rhythmogenesis in networks with synaptic adaptation and plasticity.

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