Abstract

Transient, task related synchronous activity within neural populations has been recognized as the substrate of temporal coding in the brain. The mechanisms underlying inducing and propagation of transient synchronous activity are still unknown, and we propose that short-term plasticity (STP) of neural circuits may serve as a supplemental mechanism therein. By computational modeling, we showed that short-term facilitation greatly increases the reactivation rate of population spikes and decreases the latency of response to reactivation stimuli in local recurrent neural networks. Meanwhile, the timing of population spike reactivation is controlled by the memory effect of STP, and it is mediated primarily by the facilitation time constant. Furthermore, we demonstrated that synaptic facilitation dramatically enhances synchrony propagation in feedforward neural networks and that response timing mediated by synaptic facilitation offers a scheme for information routing. In addition, we verified that synaptic strengthening of intralayer or interlayer coupling enhances synchrony propagation, and we verified that other factors such as the delay of synaptic transmission and the mode of synaptic connectivity are also involved in regulating synchronous activity propagation. Overall, our results highlight the functional role of STP in regulating the inducing and propagation of transient synchronous activity, and they may inspire testable hypotheses for future experimental studies.

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