Markov Blankets in the Brain
Abstract
Recent characterisations of self-organising systems depend upon the presence of a Markov blanket: a statistical boundary that mediates the interactions between what is inside of and outside of a system. We leverage this idea to provide an analysis of partitions in neuronal systems. This is applicable to brain architectures at multiple scales, enabling partitions into single neurons, brain regions, and brain-wide networks. This treatment is based upon the canonical micro-circuitry used in empirical studies of effective connectivity, so as to speak directly to practical applications. This depends upon the dynamic coupling between functional units, whose form recapitulates that of a Markov blanket at each level. The nuance afforded by partitioning neural systems in this way highlights certain limitations of modular perspectives of brain function that only consider a single level of description.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2006.02741,
title = {Markov Blankets in the Brain},
author = {Ines Hipolito and Maxwell Ramstead and Laura Convertino and Anjali Bhat and Karl Friston and Thomas Parr},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2006.02741},
year = {2020}
}
Comments
25 pages, 5 figures, 1 table, Glossary