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Articles, Behavioral/Cognitive

Collective Activity of Many Bistable Assemblies Reproduces Characteristic Dynamics of Multistable Perception

Robin Cao, Alexander Pastukhov, Maurizio Mattia and Jochen Braun
Journal of Neuroscience 29 June 2016, 36 (26) 6957-6972; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4626-15.2016
Robin Cao
1Institute of Biology, Otto-von-Guericke University, 39120 Magdeburg, Germany, 3Istituto Superiore di Sanità, 00161 Rome, Italy, and
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Alexander Pastukhov
4Institute of Psychology, Otto-Friedrich-University, 96047 Bamberg, Germany
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Maurizio Mattia
3Istituto Superiore di Sanità, 00161 Rome, Italy, and
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Jochen Braun
1Institute of Biology, Otto-von-Guericke University, 39120 Magdeburg, Germany, 2Center for Behavioral Brain Sciences, 39120 Magdeburg, Germany,
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Abstract

The timing of perceptual decisions depends on both deterministic and stochastic factors, as the gradual accumulation of sensory evidence (deterministic) is contaminated by sensory and/or internal noise (stochastic). When human observers view multistable visual displays, successive episodes of stochastic accumulation culminate in repeated reversals of visual appearance. Treating reversal timing as a “first-passage time” problem, we ask how the observed timing densities constrain the underlying stochastic accumulation. Importantly, mean reversal times (i.e., deterministic factors) differ enormously between displays/observers/stimulation levels, whereas the variance and skewness of reversal times (i.e., stochastic factors) keep characteristic proportions of the mean. What sort of stochastic process could reproduce this highly consistent “scaling property?” Here we show that the collective activity of a finite population of bistable units (i.e., a generalized Ehrenfest process) quantitatively reproduces all aspects of the scaling property of multistable phenomena, in contrast to other processes under consideration (Poisson, Wiener, or Ornstein-Uhlenbeck process). The postulated units express the spontaneous dynamics of attractor assemblies transitioning between distinct activity states. Plausible candidates are cortical columns, or clusters of columns, as they are preferentially connected and spontaneously explore a restricted repertoire of activity states. Our findings suggests that perceptual representations are granular, probabilistic, and operate far from equilibrium, thereby offering a suitable substrate for statistical inference.

SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Spontaneous reversals of high-level perception, so-called multistable perception, conform to highly consistent and characteristic statistics, constraining plausible neural representations. We show that the observed perceptual dynamics would be reproduced quantitatively by a finite population of distinct neural assemblies, each with locally bistable activity, operating far from the collective equilibrium (generalized Ehrenfest process). Such a representation would be consistent with the intrinsic stochastic dynamics of neocortical activity, which is dominated by preferentially connected assemblies, such as cortical columns or clusters of columns. We predict that local neuron assemblies will express bistable dynamics, with spontaneous active-inactive transitions, whenever they contribute to high-level perception.

  • attractor cell assemblies
  • birth-death process
  • cortical columns
  • first-passage time
  • multistable perception
  • scaling property
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The Journal of Neuroscience: 36 (26)
Journal of Neuroscience
Vol. 36, Issue 26
29 Jun 2016
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Collective Activity of Many Bistable Assemblies Reproduces Characteristic Dynamics of Multistable Perception
Robin Cao, Alexander Pastukhov, Maurizio Mattia, Jochen Braun
Journal of Neuroscience 29 June 2016, 36 (26) 6957-6972; DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4626-15.2016

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Collective Activity of Many Bistable Assemblies Reproduces Characteristic Dynamics of Multistable Perception
Robin Cao, Alexander Pastukhov, Maurizio Mattia, Jochen Braun
Journal of Neuroscience 29 June 2016, 36 (26) 6957-6972; DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4626-15.2016
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Keywords

  • attractor cell assemblies
  • birth-death process
  • cortical columns
  • first-passage time
  • multistable perception
  • scaling property

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