ePoster

DISENTANGLING NEURAL TRAVELING WAVES FROM CAUSAL INFORMATION FLOW

Andrea Alamiaand 3 co-authors

CerCo CNRS

FENS Forum 2026 (2026)
Barcelona, Spain
Board PS06-09PM-327

Presentation

Date TBA

Board: PS06-09PM-327

Poster preview

DISENTANGLING NEURAL TRAVELING WAVES FROM CAUSAL INFORMATION FLOW poster preview

Event Information

Poster Board

PS06-09PM-327

Abstract

In many behavioral conditions, neural activity manifests itself within and across brain regions as traveling waves. Most methods detect traveling waves by measuring spatial phase gradients, i.e., monotonic and ordered phase changes through space. It is unclear, however, how these traveling waves relate to the causal directionality of information flow. Here, we analyze systems of coupled nodes with an external input to one node. We demonstrate that the phase ordering in traveling waves does not always correspond to the direction of effective information flow. We show that discrepancies can emerge in the case of systems with delays and inhibitory influences. As a methodological solution, we show that Granger causality analysis can recover the directionality of the information flow. We propose a new measure called DIFF, the Directional Information Flow Field. DIFF is constructed by analyzing directed causal influences in space and time between neighbours, yielding a vector field. As a proof of principle, we show that, in a 2D field where a connected network is perturbed by an external input, the Divergence of DIFF can identify the spatial source of the perturbations. Furthermore, we applied DIFF on three different datasets: two ECoG recordings in Macaques and Marmosets, and one scalp-EEG dataset in humans. Overall, the experimental results reveal novel and more comprehensive findings compared to previous work, thereby corroborating the effectiveness of the proposed method. We propose that causal inference methods provide complementary information to phase-based traveling wave methods in analyzing system dynamics and information flow.

Recommended posters

Cookies

We use essential cookies to run the site. Analytics cookies are optional and help us improve World Wide. Learn more.