Revealing and reshaping attractor dynamics in large networks of cortical neurons
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Abstract
Attractors play a key role in a wide range of processes including learning and memory. Due to recent innovations in recording methods, there is increasing evidence for the existence of attractor dynamics in the brain. Yet, our understanding of how these attractors emerge or disappear in a biological system is lacking. By following the spontaneous network bursts of cultured cortical networks, we are able to define a vocabulary of spatiotemporal patterns and show that they function as discrete attractors in the network dynamics. We show that electrically stimulating specific attractors eliminates them from the spontaneous vocabulary, while they are still robustly evoked by the electrical stimulation. This seemingly paradoxical finding can be explained by a Hebbian-like strengthening of specific pathways into the attractors, at the expense of weakening non-evoked pathways into the same attractors. We verify this hypothesis and provide a mechanistic explanation for the underlying changes supporting this effect. Author summary There are many hints that could evoke the same memory. There are many chains of evidence that could lead to the same decision. The mathematical object describing such dynamics is called an attractor, and is believed to be the neural basis for many cognitive phenomena. In this study, we aimed to deepen our understanding of the existence and plasticity of attractors in the dynamics of a biological neural network. We explored the spontaneous activity of cultured neural networks and identified a set of patterns that function as discrete attractors in the network dynamics. To understand how these attractors evolve, we stimulated the network to repeatedly visit some of them. Surprisingly, we observed that the stimulated patterns became less common in the spontaneous activity, while still being reliably evoked by the stimulation. This paradoxical finding was explained by the strengthening of specific pathways leading to these attractors, alongside the weakening of other pathways. These findings provide valuable insights into the mechanisms underlying attractor plasticity in biological neural networks.
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- last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00