Kennedy A, Weissbourd B. Dynamics of neural activity in early nervous system evolution.
Curr Opin Behav Sci 2024;
59:101437. [PMID:
39758090 PMCID:
PMC11694645 DOI:
10.1016/j.cobeha.2024.101437]
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Abstract
New techniques for largescale neural recordings from diverse animals are reshaping comparative systems neuroscience. This growth necessitates fresh conceptual paradigms for comparing neural circuits and activity patterns. Here, we take a systems neuroscience approach to early neural evolution, emphasizing the importance of considering nervous systems as multiply modulated, continuous dynamical systems. We argue that endogenous neural activity likely arose early in evolution to organize behaviors and internal states at the organismal level. This connects to a rich literature on the physiology of endogenous activity in small neural circuits: a field that has built links between data and dynamical systems models. Such models offer mechanistic insight and have robust predictive power. Using these tools, we suggest that the emergence of intrinsically active neurons and periodic dynamics played a critical role in the ascendancy of nervous systems, and that dynamical systems presents an appealing framework for comparing across species.
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