Cortical computations emerge from the dynamics of neurons embedded in complex cortical circuits. Within these circuits, neuronal ensembles, which represent subnetworks with shared functional connectivity, emerge in an experience-dependent manner. Here we induced ensembles inex vivocortical circuits from mice of either sex by differentially activating subpopulations through chronic optogenetic stimulation. We observed a decrease in voltage correlation, and importantly a synaptic decoupling between the stimulated and nonstimulated populations. We also observed a decrease in firing rate during Up-states in the stimulated population. These ensemble-specific changes were accompanied by decreases in intrinsic excitability in the stimulated population, and a decrease in connectivity between stimulated and nonstimulated pyramidal neurons. By incorporating the empirically observed changes in intrinsic excitability and connectivity into a spiking neural network model, we were able to demonstrate that changes in both intrinsic excitability and connectivity accounted for the decreased firing rate, but only changes in connectivity accounted for the observed decorrelation. Our findings help ascertain the mechanisms underlying the ability of chronic patterned stimulation to create ensembles within cortical circuits and, importantly, show that while Up-states are a global network-wide phenomenon, functionally distinct ensembles can preserve their identity during Up-states through differential firing rates and correlations. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENTThe connectivity and activity patterns of local cortical circuits are shaped by experience. This experience-dependent reorganization of cortical circuits is driven by complex interactions between different local learning rules, external input, and reciprocal feedback between many distinct brain areas. Here we used anex vivoapproach to demonstrate how simple forms of chronic external stimulation can shape local cortical circuits in terms of their correlated activity and functional connectivity. The absence of feedback between different brain areas and full control of external input allowed for a tractable system to study the underlying mechanisms and development of a computational model. Results show that differential stimulation of subpopulations of neurons significantly reshapes cortical circuits and forms subnetworks referred to as neuronal ensembles. 
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                    This content will become publicly available on May 4, 2026
                            
                            Spontaneous Dynamics Predict the Effects of Targeted Intervention in Hippocampal Neuronal Cultures
                        
                    
    
            ABSTRACT Achieving targeted perturbations of neural activity is essential for dissecting the causal architecture of brain circuits. A crucial challenge in targeted manipulation experiments is the identification ofhigh efficacyperturbation sites whose stimulation exerts desired effects, currently done with costly trial-and-error procedures. Can one predict stimulation effects solely based on observations of the circuit activity, in the absence of perturbation? We answer this question in dissociated neuronal cultures on High-Density Microelectrode Arrays (HD-MEAs), which, compared toin vivopreparations, offer a controllablein vitroplatform that enables precise stimulation and full access to network dynamics. We first reconstruct theperturbome- the full map of network responses to focal electrical stimulation - by sequentially activating individual single sites and quantifying their network-wide effects. The measured perturbome patterns cluster into functional modules, with limited spread across clusters. We then demonstrate that the perturbome can be predicted from spontaneous activity alone. Using short baseline recordings in the absence of perturbations, we estimate Effective Connectivity (EC) and show that it predicts the spatial organization of the perturbome, including spatial clusters and local connectivity. Our results demonstrate that spontaneous dynamics encode the latent causal structure of neural circuits and that EC metrics can serve as effective, model-free proxies for stimulation outcomes. This framework enables data-driven targeting and causal inferencein vitro, with potential applications to more complex preparations such as human iPSC-derived neurons and brain organoids, with implications for both basic research and therapeutic strategies targeting neurological disorders. Significance StatementNeuronal cultures are increasingly used as controllable platforms to study neuronal network dynamics, neuromodulation, and brain-inspired therapies. To fully exploit their potential, we need robust methods to probe and interpret causal interactions. Here, we develop a framework to reconstruct the perturbome—the network-wide map of responses to localized electrical stimulation—and show that it can be predicted from spontaneous activity alone. Using simple, model-free metrics of Effective Connectivity, we reveal that ongoing activity encodes causal structure and provides reliable proxies for stimulation outcomes. This validates EC as a practical measure of causal influence in vitro. Our methodology refines the use of neuronal cultures for brain-on-a-chip approaches, and paves the way for data-driven neuromodulation strategies in human stem cell–derived neurons and brain organoids. 
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                            - Award ID(s):
- 2238247
- PAR ID:
- 10631309
- Publisher / Repository:
- bioRxiv
- Date Published:
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Institution:
- bioRxiv
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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