Abstract
Degeneracy is defined as multiple sets of solutions that can produce very similar system performance. Degeneracy is seen across phylogenetic scales, in all kinds of organisms. In neuroscience, degeneracy can be seen in the constellation of biophysical properties that produce a neuron’s characteristic intrinsic properties and/or the constellation of mechanisms that determine circuit outputs or behavior. Here, we present examples of degeneracy at multiple levels of organization, from single-cell behavior, small circuits, large circuits, and, in cognition, drawing conclusions from work ranging from bacteria to human cognition. Degeneracy allows the individual-to-individual variability within a population that creates potential for evolution.
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Albantakis, L., Bernard, C., Brenner, N., Marder, E., & Narayanan, R. (2024). The Brain’s Best Kept Secret Is Its Degenerate Structure. In Journal of Neuroscience (Vol. 44). Society for Neuroscience. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1339-24.2024
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