Premium accounts now available! Sign up and create a premium account. Read more Close

Advertisement

Image

Gradients in excitability generate hippocampal waves and shape their interactions with cortex

Preprint Created on 29 May 2026 bioRxiv

Travelling waves are a prominent feature of hippocampal activity, but the mechanisms determining their propagation and influence on the cerebral cortex remain unclear. Using a biophysically-grounded model of neural activity evolving across hippocampal and cortical surfaces, we show that spatial gradients in external input or neural excitability are a sufficient mechanism for the emergence of travelling waves along the long axis of the hippocampus. These waves emerge only above a critical gradient threshold, propagate with biologically-plausible velocities and exhibit frequency-dependent reversals in direction across slow and fast theta regimes. When coupled to the cerebral cortex, anterior-to-posterior hippocampal waves selectively reorganise globally synchronous cortical activity into metastable travelling waves, whereas posterior-to-anterior hippocampal waves do not, revealing a directional asymmetry in hippocampal-cortical communication. Conversely, cortical waves aligned with large-scale functional gradients induce structured hippocampal waves, revealing complementary direction specific effects across the two systems. These analyses identify structured excitability gradients as a principle governing wave propagation in the hippocampus and suggest how wave-to-wave interactions may coordinate complex cortical and hippocampal interactions during mnemonic and perceptual processes.

Behler, A., Phogat, R., Jones, D. T., Shine, J., Breakspear, M.

Advertisement

Stats

  • Recommendations n/a n/a positive of 0 vote(s)
  • Views 10
  • Comments 0

Recommended by

  • No recommendations yet.

Post a comment

You need to be signed in to post comments. You can sign in here.

Comments

There are no comments yet.

Advertisement