
Friedrich Sommer
VerifiedUniversity of California, Berkeley · Center for Computational Biology
Active 1916–2024
Research topics
- Computer Science
- Artificial Intelligence
- Neuroscience
- Statistical physics
- Cognitive science
- Physics
- Psychology
Selected publications
Consciousness is supported by near-critical slow cortical electrodynamics
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences · 2022 · 143 citations
- Computer Science
- Artificial Intelligence
- Neuroscience
Mounting evidence suggests that during conscious states, the electrodynamics of the cortex are poised near a critical point or phase transition and that this near-critical behavior supports the vast flow of information through cortical networks during conscious states. Here, we empirically identify a mathematically specific critical point near which waking cortical oscillatory dynamics operate, which is known as the edge-of-chaos critical point, or the boundary between stability and chaos. We do so by applying the recently developed modified 0-1 chaos test to electrocorticography (ECoG) and magnetoencephalography (MEG) recordings from the cortices of humans and macaques across normal waking, generalized seizure, anesthesia, and psychedelic states. Our evidence suggests that cortical information processing is disrupted during unconscious states because of a transition of low-frequency cortical electric oscillations away from this critical point; conversely, we show that psychedelics may increase the information richness of cortical activity by tuning low-frequency cortical oscillations closer to this critical point. Finally, we analyze clinical electroencephalography (EEG) recordings from patients with disorders of consciousness (DOC) and show that assessing the proximity of slow cortical oscillatory electrodynamics to the edge-of-chaos critical point may be useful as an index of consciousness in the clinical setting.
Recent grants
NSF · $1.5M · 2009–2015
NSF · $450k · 2017–2023
CRCNS data sharing: Central facility and services
NSF · $200k · 2007–2009
NIH · $701k · 2018–2023
NSF · $402k · 2007–2011
Frequent coauthors
- 62 shared
E. Paxon Frady
- 42 shared
Denis Kleyko
- 40 shared
Bruno A. Olshausen
- 36 shared
Alpha Renner
ETH Zurich
- 31 shared
H. C. Heinrich Behnke
Clausthal University of Technology
- 24 shared
Giacomo Indiveri
University of Zurich
- 20 shared
Zengyi Li
- 19 shared
Yubei Chen
University of California, Davis
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