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Phys. Rev. E 77, 051909 (2008) [6 pages]

Interplay between a phase response curve and spike-timing-dependent plasticity leading to wireless clustering

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Hideyuki Câteau1,*, Katsunori Kitano2, and Tomoki Fukai1,3
1Laboratory for Neural Circut Theory, RIKEN Brain Science Institute, 2–1 Hirowasa, Wako, Saitama 351-0198, Japan
2Department of Human and Computer Intelligence, Ritsumeikan University, 1-1-1 Nojihigashi, Kusatsu, Shiga 525-8577, Japan
3Department of Complexity Science and Engineering, University of Tokyo, Kashiwa, Chiba 277–8561, Japan

Received 28 March 2008; published 13 May 2008

A phase response curve (PRC) characterizes the signal transduction between oscillators such as neurons on a fixed network in a minimal manner, while spike-timing-dependent plasiticity (STDP) characterizes the way of rewiring networks in an activity-dependent manner. This paper demonstrates that these two key properties both related to the interaction times of oscillators work synergetically to carve functionally useful circuits. STDP working on neurons that prefer asynchrony converts the initial asynchronous firing to clustered firing with synchrony within a cluster. They get synchronized within a cluster despite their preference to asynchrony because STDP selectively disrupts intracluster connections, which we call wireless clustering. Our PRC analysis reveals a triad mechanism: the network structure affects how the PRC is read out to determine the synchrony tendency, the synchrony tendency affects how the STDP works, and STDP affects the network structure, closing the loop.

© 2008 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevE.77.051909
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevE.77.051909
PACS:
87.19.L−, 87.18.Sn, 05.10.Gg, 02.50.Ey

*Present address: Recognition and Judgement Unit, RIKEN BSI-Toyota Collaboration Center (BTCC), 2–1 Hirowasa, Wako, Saitama 351-0198, Japan