Saltar al contenido principal

Escribe una PREreview

Topological Phase Transitions in Whole-Brain Dynamics Driven by Spatially Heterogeneous Receptor Gain Modulation: A Receptor-Constrained Dynamical Topology (RCDT) Hypothesis

Publicada
Servidor
bioRxiv
DOI
10.64898/2026.02.04.703742

The mechanistic link between molecular pharmacology and global brain dynamics remains unresolved - a "scale bridge" problem central to consciousness research. We propose the Receptor-Constrained Dynamical Topology (RCDT) hypothesis: that the functional impact of neuromodulatory drugs propagates from local ligand-receptor binding events through spatially heterogeneous gain modulation to produce qualitative reorganizations of the whole-brain dynamical attractor. Using a biophysically grounded whole-brain model - Wilson-Cowan excitatory-inhibitory dynamics on structural connectivity with axonal delays - we implement pharmacology via gain modulation weighted by 5-HT2A receptor density (Beliveau et al., 2017). Topological state-space analysis via Takens embedding and persistent homology reveals a mapping from molecular receptor distribution to the global topological manifold. We define ego dissolution operationally as a breakdown of low-dimensional Betti-1 stability: a transition from a single dominant 1-cycle (constrained dynamics) to fragmented or higher-dimensional topological structure. The RCDT hypothesis is explicitly falsifiable: receptor-shuffling controls and concentration-topology response curves provide clear failure criteria. This work establishes a formal framework for bridging pharmacology, dynamics, and topology without invoking phenomenological experience as a premise.

Puedes escribir una PREreview de Topological Phase Transitions in Whole-Brain Dynamics Driven by Spatially Heterogeneous Receptor Gain Modulation: A Receptor-Constrained Dynamical Topology (RCDT) Hypothesis. Una PREreview es una revisión de un preprint y puede variar desde unas pocas oraciones hasta un extenso informe, similar a un informe de revisión por pares organizado por una revista.

Antes de comenzar

Te pediremos que inicies sesión con tu ORCID iD. Si no tienes un iD, puedes crear uno.

¿Qué es un ORCID iD?

Un ORCID iD es un identificador único que te distingue de otros/as con tu mismo nombre o uno similar.

Comenzar ahora