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Neuromodulatory control of complex adaptive dynamics in the brain.

James M Shine
Published in: Interface focus (2023)
How is the massive dimensionality and complexity of the microscopic constituents of the nervous system brought under sufficiently tight control so as to coordinate adaptive behaviour? A powerful means for striking this balance is to poise neurons close to the critical point of a phase transition, at which a small change in neuronal excitability can manifest a nonlinear augmentation in neuronal activity. How the brain could mediate this critical transition is a key open question in neuroscience. Here, I propose that the different arms of the ascending arousal system provide the brain with a diverse set of heterogeneous control parameters that can be used to modulate the excitability and receptivity of target neurons-in other words, to act as control parameters for mediating critical neuronal order. Through a series of worked examples, I demonstrate how the neuromodulatory arousal system can interact with the inherent topological complexity of neuronal subsystems in the brain to mediate complex adaptive behaviour.
Keyphrases
  • cerebral ischemia
  • resting state
  • white matter
  • blood brain barrier
  • subarachnoid hemorrhage
  • functional connectivity
  • spinal cord
  • brain injury
  • transcranial direct current stimulation