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Creators/Authors contains: "Ruebel, Oliver"

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  1. Modern recordings of neural activity provide diverse observations of neurons across brain areas, behavioral conditions, and subjects; presenting an exciting opportunity to reveal the fundamentals of brain-wide dynamics. Current analysis methods, however, often fail to fully harness the richness of such data, as they provide either uninterpretable representations (e.g., via deep networks) or oversimplify models (e.g., by assuming stationary dynamics or analyzing each session independently). Here, instead of regarding asynchronous neural recordings that lack alignment in neural identity or brain areas as a limitation, we leverage these diverse views into the brain to learn a unified model of neural dynamics. Specifically, we assume that brain activity is driven by multiple hidden global sub-circuits. These sub-circuits represent global basis interactions between neural ensembles—functional groups of neurons—such that the time-varying decomposition of these sub-circuits defines how the ensembles’ interactions evolve over time non-stationarily and non-linearly. We discover the neural ensembles underlying non-simultaneous observations, along with their non-stationary evolving interactions, with our new model, CREIMBO (Cross-Regional Ensemble Interactions in Multi-view Brain Observations). CREIMBO identifies the hidden composition of per-session neural ensembles through novel graph-driven dictionary learning and models the ensemble dynamics on a low-dimensional manifold spanned by a sparse time-varying composition of the global sub-circuits. Thus, CREIMBO disentangles overlapping temporal neural processes while preserving interpretability due to the use of a shared underlying sub-circuit basis. Moreover, CREIMBO distinguishes session-specific computations from global (session-invariant) ones by identifying session covariates and variations in sub-circuit activations. We demonstrate CREIMBO’s ability to recover true components in synthetic data, and uncover meaningful brain dynamics in human high-density electrode recordings, including cross-subject neural mechanisms as well as inter- vs. intra-region dynamical motifs. Furthermore, using mouse whole-brain recordings, we show CREIMBO’s ability to discover dynamical interactions that capture task and behavioral variables and meaningfully align with the biological importance of the brain areas they represent 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available January 22, 2026