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Research PaperResearchia:202606.23022

SPIDER -- Stitched Power-spectra for Inferring Directed information flow from incomplete and asynchronous Experimental Recordings

Yisi S. Zhang

Abstract

Mapping the directed flow of information between brain regions -- their effective connectivity -- is central to understanding brain function, yet large-scale recordings sample only a fraction of the brain at a time: sessions, animals, and laboratories cover different, partially overlapping regions, usually without a shared temporal reference. Established directed-connectivity methods (Granger causality, dynamic causal modeling, partial directed coherence, PDC) require all regions to be recorded ...

Submitted: June 23, 2026Subjects: Neuroscience; Neuroscience

Description / Details

Mapping the directed flow of information between brain regions -- their effective connectivity -- is central to understanding brain function, yet large-scale recordings sample only a fraction of the brain at a time: sessions, animals, and laboratories cover different, partially overlapping regions, usually without a shared temporal reference. Established directed-connectivity methods (Granger causality, dynamic causal modeling, partial directed coherence, PDC) require all regions to be recorded simultaneously and with a common clock. We introduce SPIDER, a non-parametric, frequency-domain framework that recovers directed information flow from such incomplete, asynchronous recordings: it stitches local power-spectral estimates from overlapping channel subsets into a global spectral matrix and obtains frequency-resolved directed interactions by canonical spectral factorization and PDC, without temporal alignment, while nuclear-norm completion fills in never-co-observed region pairs. With consistency guarantees, we validate SPIDER on simulations, two-photon calcium imaging, and the International Brain Laboratory Neuropixels dataset, recovering directed flow among 50 areas from 43 sessions in 12 laboratories never recorded together. Beyond validation, SPIDER reveals what no single recording can: brain-wide spontaneous flow is largely recurrent, but in the theta band it forms a significant feedforward hierarchy with the hippocampal formation at its source. Applied to resting human intracranial EEG (43 patients, non-overlapping coverage), it recovers the same theta-band hierarchy across species and modality. SPIDER makes whole-brain effective-connectivity analysis tractable for multi-session, multi-animal datasets previously incompatible with directed-flow inference.


Source: arXiv:2606.22695v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2606.22695v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2606.22695v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2606.22695v1

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Date:
Jun 23, 2026
Topic:
Neuroscience
Area:
Neuroscience
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