Our new paper, Heitmann et al. [get PDF], is finally out! It's a collaboration between the theoretical neuroscientists Stewart Heitmann and Bard Ermentrout at the University of Pittsburgh, and the Truccolo lab at Brown University.
This work could help us understand what happens when we stimulate cerebral cortex in primates using optogenetics. Modeling how the brain responds to stimulation is important for learning how to use this new technology to control neural activity.
Optogenetic stimulation elicits gamma (~50 Hz) oscillations, the amplitude of which grows with the intensity of light stimulation. However, traveling waves away from the stimulation site also emerge.
It's difficult to reconcile oscillatory and traveling-wave dynamics in neural field models, but Heitmann et al. arrive at a surprising and testable prediction:
The observed effects can be explained by paradoxical recruitment of inhibition at low levels of stimulation, which changes cortex from a wave-propagating medium to an oscillator.
At higher stimulation levels, excitation overwhelms inhibition, giving rise to the observed gamma oscillations.
Many thanks to Stewart Heitmann, Wilson Truccolo, and Bard Ermentrout. The paper can be cited as: