PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Guillaume Hennequin AU - Yashar Ahmadian AU - Daniel B. Rubin AU - Máté Lengyel AU - Kenneth D. Miller TI - Stabilized supralinear network dynamics account for stimulus-induced changes of noise variability in the cortex AID - 10.1101/094334 DP - 2016 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 094334 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2016/12/14/094334.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2016/12/14/094334.full AB - Variability and correlations in cortical activity are ubiquitously modulated by stimuli. Correlated variability is quenched following stimulus onset across multiple cortical areas, suppressing low-frequency components of the LFP and of Vm-LFP coherence. Modulation of Fano factors and correlations in area MT is tuned for stimulus direction. What circuit mechanisms underly these behaviors? We show that a simple model circuit, the stochastic Stabilized Supralinear Network (SSN), robustly explains these results. Stimuli modulate variability by modifying two forms of effective connectivity between activity patterns that characterize excitatory-inhibitory (E/I) circuits. Increases in the strength with which activity patterns inhibit themselves reduce correlated variability, while increases in feedforward connections between patterns (transforming E/I imbalance into balanced fluctuations) increase variability. These results suggest an operating regime of cortical dynamics that involves fast fluctuations and fast responses to stimulus changes, unlike previous models of variability suppression through suppression of chaos or networks with multiple attractors.