scholarly journals Topological analysis of differential effects of ketamine and propofol anaesthesia on brain dynamics

2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (6) ◽  
pp. 201971
Author(s):  
Thomas F. Varley ◽  
Vanessa Denny ◽  
Olaf Sporns ◽  
Alice Patania

Research has found that the vividness of conscious experience is related to brain dynamics. Despite both being anaesthetics, propofol and ketamine produce different subjective states: we explore the different effects of these two anaesthetics on the structure of dynamic attractors reconstructed from electrophysiological activity recorded from cerebral cortex of two macaques. We used two methods: the first embeds the recordings in a continuous high-dimensional manifold on which we use topological data analysis to infer the presence of higher-order dynamics. The second reconstruction, an ordinal partition network embedding, allows us to create a discrete state-transition network, which is amenable to information-theoretic analysis and contains rich information about state-transition dynamics. We find that the awake condition generally had the ‘richest’ structure, visiting the most states, the presence of pronounced higher-order structures, and the least deterministic dynamics. By contrast, the propofol condition had the most dissimilar dynamics, transitioning to a more impoverished, constrained, low-structure regime. The ketamine condition, interestingly, seemed to combine aspects of both: while it was generally less complex than the awake condition, it remained well above propofol in almost all measures. These results provide deeper and more comprehensive insights than what is typically gained by using point-measures of complexity.

Author(s):  
Thomas F. Varley ◽  
Vanessa Denny ◽  
Olaf Sporns ◽  
Alice Patania

AbstractResearch into the neural correlates of consciousness has found that the vividness and complexity of conscious experience is related to the structure of brain dynamics, and that alterations to consciousness track changes in temporal evolution of brain states. Despite inducing externally similar states, propofol and ketamine produce different subjective states of consciousness: here we explore the different effects of these two anaesthetics on the structure of dynamical attractors reconstructed from electrophysiological activity recorded from cerebral cortex of two non-human primates. We used two different methods of attractor reconstruction: the first embeds the recordings in a continuous high-dimensional manifold on which we use topological data analysis to infer the presence (or absence) of higher-order dynamics. The second reconstruction, an ordinal partition network embedding, allows us to create a discrete state-transition network approximation of a continuous attractor, which is amenable to information-theoretic analysis and contains rich information about state-transition dynamics. We find that the awake condition generally had the “richest” structure, with the widest repertoire of available states, the presence of pronounced higher-order structures, and the least deterministic dynamics. In contrast, the propofol condition had the most dissimilar dynamics to normal consciousness, transitioning to a more impoverished, constrained, low-structure regime. The ketamine condition, interestingly, seemed to combine aspects of both: while it was generally less complex than the awake condition, it remained well above propofol in almost all measures. These results may provides insights into how consciousness can persist under the influence of ketamine and the battery of measures used provides deeper and more comprehensive insights than what is typically gained by using point-measures of complexity.


1994 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 435-454 ◽  
Author(s):  
Neal Brand ◽  
Steve Jackson

In [11] it is shown that the theory of almost all graphs is first-order complete. Furthermore, in [3] a collection of first-order axioms are given from which any first-order property or its negation can be deduced. Here we show that almost all Steinhaus graphs satisfy the axioms of almost all graphs and conclude that a first-order property is true for almost all graphs if and only if it is true for almost all Steinhaus graphs. We also show that certain classes of subgraphs of vertex transitive graphs are first-order complete. Finally, we give a new class of higher-order axioms from which it follows that large subgraphs of specified type exist in almost all graphs.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicholas Martin Rosseinsky

Are there scientifically-reliable experiments about conscious experience? It *seems* obvious we can reliably report e.g. our visual experience. But standard physics says that brain-dynamics, not contents-of-experience, drive report. Despite numerous attempts to make this observation consistent with reliable collection of data about experience, what's really needed for reliability is for our Universe to be consistent with a certain kind of non-standard physics. An experiment to identify the science-of-consciousness-relevant physical-basis-of-reality is identified.


2022 ◽  
Vol 205 ◽  
pp. 107707
Author(s):  
Tengfei Zhang ◽  
Defeng Wu ◽  
Lingyu Li ◽  
Andre S. Yamashita ◽  
Saifeng Huang

Author(s):  
Lesly Yahaira Rodríguez Martínez ◽  
María Guadalupe Pérez Martínez ◽  
Adriana Mercado Salas

This paper reports an analysis of the tasks included in the Mathematical Challenges book. The analysis was based on the proposals of the Authentic Intellectual Work (AIW). The purpose of the study focuses on assessing the potential of the mathematical challenges to promote in-depth and meaningful learning through the connection with different contexts, and other features including purpose, multiple-solution pathways, construction of knowledge and higher order thinking. Participants in this study were 3 elementary school teachers, 2 mathematics specialists and the authors of this paper; they assessed the Mathematical Challenges through a questionnaire based on specific rubrics. The study used a mixed methods approach. The analysis produced two main findings. First, challenges vary in their connections to students' lives according to the context they come from. Second, almost all mathematical challenges are related to the highest levels of others AIW criteria.


2007 ◽  
Vol 31 (4) ◽  
pp. 426-440 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.-P. de Almeida ◽  
J.G. Morley ◽  
I.J. Dowman

2019 ◽  
Vol 334 ◽  
pp. 89-99 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaojun Zhou ◽  
Ke Yang ◽  
Yongfang Xie ◽  
Chunhua Yang ◽  
Tingwen Huang

1995 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 239-254
Author(s):  
Robert M. Francescotti

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