Many experimental results, both in-vivo and in-vitro, support the idea that the brain cortex
operates near a critical point, and at the same time works as a reservoir of precise spatio-temporal
patterns. However the mechanism at the basis of these observations is still not clear. In this paper
we introduce a model which combines both these features, showing that scale-free avalanches are
the signature of a system posed near the spinodal line of a rst order transition, with many spatiotemporal
patterns stored as dynamical metastable attractors. Specically, we studied a network of
leaky integrate and re neurons, whose connections are the result of the learning of multiple spatiotemporal
dynamical patterns, each with a randomly chosen ordering of the neurons. We found that
the network shows a rst order transition between a low spiking rate disordered state (down), and
a high rate state characterized by the emergence of collective activity and the replay of one of the
stored patterns (up). The transition is characterized by hysteresis, or alternation of up and down
states, depending on the lifetime of the metastable states. In both cases, critical features and neural
avalanches are observed. Notably, critical phenomena occur at the edge of a discontinuous phase
transition, as recently observed in a network of glow lamps
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