Conceptual foundations of physiological regulation incorporating the free energy principle and self-organized criticality

Neurosci Biobehav Rev. 2023 Dec:155:105459. doi: 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2023.105459. Epub 2023 Nov 11.

Abstract

Bettinger, J. S., K. J. Friston. Conceptual Foundations of Physiological Regulation incorporating the Free Energy Principle & Self-Organized Criticality. NEUROSCI BIOBEHAV REV 23(x) 144-XXX, 2022. Since the late nineteen-nineties, the concept of homeostasis has been contextualized within a broader class of "allostatic" dynamics characterized by a wider-berth of causal factors including social, psychological and environmental entailments; the fundamental nature of integrated brain-body dynamics; plus the role of anticipatory, top-down constraints supplied by intrinsic regulatory models. Many of these evidentiary factors are integral in original descriptions of homeostasis; subsequently integrated; and/or cite more-general operating principles of self-organization. As a result, the concept of allostasis may be generalized to a larger category of variational systems in biology, engineering and physics in terms of advances in complex systems, statistical mechanics and dynamics involving heterogenous (hierarchical/heterarchical, modular) systems like brain-networks and the internal milieu. This paper offers a three-part treatment. 1) interpret "allostasis" to emphasize a variational and relational foundation of physiological stability; 2) adapt the role of allostasis as "stability through change" to include a "return to stability" and 3) reframe the model of homeostasis with a conceptual model of criticality that licenses the upgrade to variational dynamics.

Keywords: Allostasis; Complex adaptive systems; Computational psychiatry; Control theory; Criticality; Dynamic stability; Free energy principle; Griffiths region; Homeostasis; Metastability; Neuro-immunology; Physiological regulation; Resilience; Variational systems.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Adaptation, Physiological / physiology
  • Allostasis* / physiology
  • Brain / physiology
  • Humans
  • Models, Theoretical