Conditions for replay of neuronal assemblies

Gaspar Cano and Richard Kempter

From cortical synfire chains to hippocampal replay, the idea that neural populations can be activated sequentially with precise spike timing is thought to be essential for several brain functions. It has been shown that neuronal sequences with weak feedforward connectivity can be replayed due to amplification via intra-assembly recurrent connections. However, the mechanisms behind this phenomenon are still unclear. Here, we simulate spiking networks with different excitatory and inhibitory connectivity and find that an exclusively excitatory network is sufficient for this amplification to occur. To explain the spiking network behavior, we introduce a population model of membrane-potential distributions, and we analytically describe how different connectivity structures determine replay speed, with weaker feedforward connectivity generating slower and wider pulses that can be sustained by recurrent connections. Pulse propagation is facilitated if the neuronal membrane time constant is large compared to the pulse width. Together, our simulations and analytical results predict the conditions for replay of neuronal assemblies.

PLOS Comput Biol. 22(1): e1013844 (2026)

 

Keywords

action potentialsmembrane potentialnetwork analysisneural networkneuronal plasticityneuronssimulation and modelingsynapse
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