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Steeve Laquitaine

Steeve Laquitaine contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

A multi-scale information geometry reveals the structure of mutual information in neural populations

Understanding how neural population responses represent sensory information is a central problem in systems neuroscience. One approach is to define a representational geometry on stimulus space in which distances reflect how reliably stimuli can be distinguished from neural activity. However, different constructions of these distances can lead to qualitatively different conclusions about the neural code. Here, we show that a unique Riemannian representational geometry emerges from first principles governing how distances contract as stimulus resolution is lost through coarse-graining. This results in a multi-scale extension of the Fisher information metric, capturing encoding structure from fine stimulus details to coarse global distinctions. The resulting geometry is exactly related to the mutual information encoded by the population: well encoded stimulus directions - those contributing more to mutual information - are expanded, whereas poorly encoded directions are contracted. The metric tensor can be estimated using diffusion models, making the framework practical for large neural populations and high-dimensional stimuli. Applied to visual cortical responses to natural images, the eigenvectors of the metric tensor identify stimulus variations that contribute most to information transmission, yielding interpretable features that are robust to modelling choices. Together, these results provide a principled, information-theoretic framework for characterising neural population codes.

preprint2021arXiv

Adaptive rewiring of random neural networks generates convergent-divergent units

Brain networks are adaptively rewired continually, adjusting their topology to bring about functionality and efficiency in sensory, motor and cognitive tasks. In model neural network architectures, adaptive rewiring generates complex, brain-like topologies. Present models, however, cannot account for the emergence of complex directed connectivity structures. We tested a biologically plausible model of adaptive rewiring in directed networks, based on two algorithms widely used in distributed computing: advection and consensus. When both are used in combination as rewiring criteria, adaptive rewiring shortens path length and enhances connectivity. When keeping a balance between advection and consensus, adaptive rewiring produces convergent-divergent units consisting of convergent hub nodes, which collect inputs from pools of sparsely connected, or local, nodes and project them via densely interconnected processing nodes onto divergent hubs that broadcast output back to the local pools. Convergent-divergent units operate within and between sensory, motor, and cognitive brain regions as their connective core, mediating context-sensitivity to local network units. By showing how these structures emerge spontaneously in directed networks models, adaptive rewiring offers self-organization as a principle for efficient information propagation and integration in the brain.