Entrainment of a network of interacting neurons with minimum stimulating charge

Phys Rev E. 2020 Jul;102(1-1):012221. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevE.102.012221.

Abstract

Periodic pulse train stimulation is generically used to study the function of the nervous system and to counteract disease-related neuronal activity, e.g., collective periodic neuronal oscillations. The efficient control of neuronal dynamics without compromising brain tissue is key to research and clinical purposes. We here adapt the minimum charge control theory, recently developed for a single neuron, to a network of interacting neurons exhibiting collective periodic oscillations. We present a general expression for the optimal waveform, which provides an entrainment of a neural network to the stimulation frequency with a minimum absolute value of the stimulating current. As in the case of a single neuron, the optimal waveform is of bang-off-bang type, but its parameters are now determined by the parameters of the effective phase response curve of the entire network, rather than of a single neuron. The theoretical results are confirmed by three specific examples: two small-scale networks of FitzHugh-Nagumo neurons with synaptic and electric couplings, as well as a large-scale network of synaptically coupled quadratic integrate-and-fire neurons.

MeSH terms

  • Brain / cytology
  • Cell Communication*
  • Models, Neurological*
  • Nerve Net / cytology*
  • Neurons / cytology*