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How patterned neural connections can be set up by self-organization
833
Citations
12
References
1976
Year
Patterned neural connections, such as topographically ordered mappings where neighboring cells project to neighboring cells, pose a key developmental biology problem. The study proposes a theory that topographical mappings arise from cell similarity in physical properties, leveraging neighborhood relationships. The theory is instantiated in a model that uses synchronized neural activity or molecular exchange between neighboring cells, with modifiable synapses to build a topographical map between sheets sharing internal structure. The model shows that mappings emerge system‑to‑system, developing step‑by‑step in an orderly fashion with orientation set early in development.
An important problem in biology is to explain how patterned neural connections are set up during ontogenesis. Topographically ordered mappings, found widely in nervous systems, are those in which neighbouring elements in one sheet of cells project to neighbouring elements in a second sheet. Exploiting this neighbourhood property leads to a new theory for the establishment of topographical mappings, in which the distance between two cells is expressed in terms of their similarity with respect to certain physical properties assigned to them. This topographical code can be realized in a model employing either synchronization of nervous activity or exchange of specific molecules between neighbouring cells. By means of modifiable synapses the code is used to set up a topographical mapping between two sheets with the same internal structure. We have investigated the neural activity version. Without needing to make any elaborate assumptions about its structure or about the operations its elements are to carry out we have shown that the mappings are set up in a system-to-system rather than a cell-to-cell fashion. The pattern of connections develops in a step-by-step and orderly fashion, the orientation of the mappings being laid down in the earliest stages of development.
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