A week in the life of the human brain: stable states punctuated by chaotic transitions.

Maxwell Wang, Max G'Sell, James F Castellano, R Mark Richardson, Avniel Ghuman
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Abstract

Many important neurocognitive states, such as performing natural activities and fluctuations of arousal, shift over minutes-to-hours in the real-world. We harnessed 3-12 days of continuous multi-electrode intracranial recordings in twenty humans during natural behavior (socializing, using digital devices, sleeping, etc.) to study real-world neurodynamics. Applying deep learning with dynamical systems approaches revealed that brain networks formed consistent stable states that predicted behavior and physiology. Changes in behavior were associated with bursts of rapid neural fluctuations where brain networks chaotically explored many configurations before settling into new states. These trajectories traversed an hourglass-shaped structure anchored around a set of networks that slowly tracked levels of outward awareness related to wake-sleep stages, and a central attractor corresponding to default mode network activation. These findings indicate ways our brains use rapid, chaotic transitions that coalesce into neurocognitive states slowly fluctuating around a stabilizing central equilibrium to balance flexibility and stability during real-world behavior.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

人类大脑生命中的一周:稳定的状态被混乱的过渡所打断。
在现实世界中,许多重要的神经认知状态,如与进行自然活动和觉醒波动有关的状态,会在几分钟到几天内发生变化。我们分析了20名参与者3-12天的连续颅内记录,这些参与者自由社交、使用数字设备、睡觉等,以了解神经动力学是如何随着行为形成和变化的。大脑网络形成了稳定的状态,可以预测行为和生理。行为变化与神经的快速波动有关,在进入新状态之前,大脑网络混乱地探索了许多配置。这些轨迹穿过沙漏状结构,清醒和睡眠处于相反的两端,中间是由默认模式网络激活表示的吸引子状态。这些发现说明了我们的大脑如何平衡稳定性和灵活性来产生真实世界的行为。
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