Litcius/Paper detail

Efficient information coding and degeneracy in the nervous system

Pavithraa Seenivasan, Rishikesh Narayanan

2022Current Opinion in Neurobiology18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Efficient information coding (EIC) is a universal biological framework rooted in the fundamental principle that system responses should match their natural stimulus statistics for maximizing environmental information. Quantitatively assessed through information theory, such adaptation to the environment occurs at all biological levels and timescales. The context dependence of environmental stimuli and the need for stable adaptations make EIC a daunting task. We argue that biological complexity is the principal architect that subserves deft execution of stable EIC. Complexity in a system is characterized by several functionally segregated subsystems that show a high degree of functional integration when they interact with each other. Complex biological systems manifest heterogeneities and degeneracy, wherein structurally different subsystems could interact to yield the same functional outcome. We argue that complex systems offer several choices that effectively implement EIC and homeostasis for each of the different contexts encountered by the system.

Topics & Concepts

Degeneracy (biology)Coding (social sciences)Computer sciencePrincipal (computer security)Information theoryNeuroscienceStimulus (psychology)Context (archaeology)Theoretical computer scienceCognitive scienceBiologyCognitive psychologyPsychologyMathematicsBioinformaticsPaleontologyStatisticsOperating systemNeural dynamics and brain functionCell Image Analysis TechniquesRetinal Development and Disorders