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A proposed name for aperiodic brain activity: stochastic chaos

✍ Scribed by W.J Freeman


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2000
Tongue
English
Weight
31 KB
Volume
13
Category
Article
ISSN
0893-6080

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✦ Synopsis


Even casual inspection of time series derived by sampling and recording from the fields of electroencephalographic (EEG) and magnetoencephalographic (MEG) potential generated by active brains reveals continuous widespread oscillations. These waves suggest the overlap of multiple rhythms embedded in broad-spectrum noise. In dynamical terms they might be ascribed to limit cycle attractors, because spectral analysis of short segments reveals peaks in the classical frequency ranges of the alpha (8-12 Hz), theta (3-7 Hz), beta (13-30 Hz) and gamma (30-100 Hz) bands of the EEG and MEG. However, autocorrelation functions go rapidly to zero, and the basic form to which spectra converge, as the duration of segments chosen for analysis increases, is a linear decrease in log power with increasing log frequency at a slope near 2 ("1/f 2 ").

This form is consistent with Brownian motion and telegraph noise. The unpredictability of brain oscillations suggests that EEGs and MEGs manifest either multiple limit cycle attractors with time variance by continuous modulation, or multiple chaotic attractors with repetitive state transitions, or time-varying colored noise, or all of the above. In all likelihood these fields of potential are epiphenomenal, probably equivalent to the sounds of internal combustion engines at work, or to antique computers in science fiction movies, or to the roars of crowds at football games. In fact, most neuroscientists reject EEG and MEG evidence, in the beliefs that the real work of brains is done by action potentials in neural networks, and that recording wave activity is equivalent to observing an engine with a stethoscope or a computer with a D'Arsonval galvanometer. However, one can learn a lot about a system by listening and watching, if one knows what to seek and find.

Numerous recent studies of the behavioral correlates of so-called "unit activity" of single neurons in sensory and motor systems have shown that the carrier of behaviorally significant information is not the pulse train of the single neuron, but instead the organized activity of arrays of neurons (see review in Note 3.7 in Freeman, 1995). How many neurons are needed to make an array? Does the Neural Networks 13 (2000) 11-13