920 research outputs found

    Dynamic system with no equilibrium and its chaos anti-synchronization

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    Recently, systems with chaos and the absence of equilibria have received a great deal of attention. In our work, a simple five-term system and its anti-synchronization are presented. It is special that the system has a hyperbolic sine nonlinearity and no equilibrium. Such a system generates chaotic behaviours, which are verified by phase portraits, positive Lyapunov exponent as well as an electronic circuit. Moreover, the system displays multistable characteristic when changing its initial conditions. By constructing an adaptive control, chaos anti-synchronization of the system with no equilibrium is obtained and illustrated via a numerical example

    Hybrid Chaos Synchronization of 3-Cells Cellular Neural Network Attractors via Adaptive Control Method

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    Abstract: In this research work, we first discuss the properties of the 3-cells cellular neural network (CNN) attractor discovered b

    Hybrid Synchronization of the Generalized Lotka-Volterra Three-Species Biological Systems via Adaptive Control

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    Abstract: Since the recent research has shown the importance of biological control in many biological systems appearing in nature, this research paper investigates research in the dynamic and chaotic analysis of the generalized Lotka-Volterra three-species biological system, which was studied b

    Symmetry in Chaotic Systems and Circuits

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    Symmetry can play an important role in the field of nonlinear systems and especially in the design of nonlinear circuits that produce chaos. Therefore, this Special Issue, titled “Symmetry in Chaotic Systems and Circuits”, presents the latest scientific advances in nonlinear chaotic systems and circuits that introduce various kinds of symmetries. Applications of chaotic systems and circuits with symmetries, or with a deliberate lack of symmetry, are also presented in this Special Issue. The volume contains 14 published papers from authors around the world. This reflects the high impact of this Special Issue

    "Monsters on the Brain: An Evolutionary Epistemology of Horror"

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    The article discusses the evolutionary development of horror and fear in animals and humans, including in regard to cognition and physiological aspects of the brain. An overview of the social aspects of emotions, including the role that emotions play in interpersonal relations and the role that empathy plays in humans' ethics, is provided. An overview of the psychological aspects of monsters, including humans' simultaneous repulsion and interest in horror films that depict monsters, is also provided

    Chaos synchronization and its application to secure communication

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    Chaos theory is well known as one of three revolutions in physical sciences in 20th-century, as one physicist called it: Relativity eliminated the Newtonian illusion of absolute space and time; quantum theory eliminated the Newtonian dream of a controllable measurable process; and chaos eliminates the Laplacian fantasy of deterministic predictability". Specially, when chaos synchronization was found in 1991, chaos theory becomes more and more attractive. Chaos has been widely applied to many scientific disciplines: mathematics, programming, microbiology, biology, computer science, economics, engineering, finance, philosophy, physics, politics, population dynamics, psychology, and robotics. One of most important engineering applications is secure communication because of the properties of random behaviours and sensitivity to initial conditions of chaos systems. Noise-like dynamical behaviours can be used to mask the original information in symmetric cryptography. Sensitivity to initial conditions and unpredictability make chaotic systems very suitable to construct one-way function in public-key cryptography. In chaos-based secure communication schemes, information signals are masked or modulated (encrypted) by chaotic signals at the transmitter and the resulting encrypted signals are sent to the corresponding receiver across a public channel (unsafe channel). Perfect chaos synchronization is usually expected to recover the original information signals. In other words, the recovery of the information signals requires the receiver's own copy of the chaotic signals which are synchronized with the transmitter ones. Thus, chaos synchronization is the key technique throughout this whole process. Due to the difficulties of generating and synchronizing chaotic systems and the limit of digital computer precision, there exist many challenges in chaos-based secure communication. In this thesis, we try to solve chaos generation and chaos synchronization problems. Starting from designing chaotic and hyperchaotic system by first-order delay differential equation, we present a family of novel cell attractors with multiple positive Lyapunov exponents. Compared with previously reported hyperchaos systems with complex mathematic structure (more than 3 dimensions), our system is relatively simple while its dynamical behaviours are very complicated. We present a systemic parameter control method to adjust the number of positive Lyapunov exponents, which is an index of chaos degree. Furthermore, we develop a delay feedback controller and apply it to Chen system to generate multi-scroll attractors. It can be generalized to Chua system, Lorenz system, Jerk equation, etc. Since chaos synchronization is the critical technique in chaos-based secure communication, we present corresponding impulsive synchronization criteria to guarantee that the receiver can generate the same chaotic signals at the receiver when time delay and uncertainty emerge in the transmission process. Aiming at the weakness of general impulsive synchronization scheme, i.e., there always exists an upper boundary to limit impulsive intervals during the synchronization process, we design a novel synchronization scheme, intermittent impulsive synchronization scheme (IISS). IISS can not only be flexibly applied to the scenario where the control window is restricted but also improve the security of chaos-based secure communication via reducing the control window width and decreasing the redundancy of synchronization signals. Finally, we propose chaos-based public-key cryptography algorithms which can be used to encrypt synchronization signals and guarantee their security across the public channel

    Multistable dynamics and control of a new 4D memristive chaotic Sprott B system

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    This work proposes and investigates the dynamic behavior of a new memristive chaotic Sprott B system. One of the interesting features of this system is that it has a bias term that can adjust the symmetry of the proposed model, inducing both homogeneous and heterogeneous behaviors. Indeed, the introduced memristive system can turn from rotational symmetry (RS) to rotational symmetry broken (RSB) system in the presence or the absence of this bias term. In the RS system (i.e., absence of the bias term), pairs of symmetric attractors are formed, and the scenario of attractor merging is observed. Coexisting symmetric attractors and bifurcations with up to four solutions are perfectly investigated. In the RSB system (i.e., the bias term is non-zero), many interesting phenomena are demonstrated, including asymmetric attractors, coexisting asymmetric bifurcations, various types of coexisting asymmetric solutions, and period-doubling transition to chaos. We perfectly demonstrate that the new asymmetric/symmetric memristive system exhibits the exciting phenomenon of partial amplitude control (PAC) and offset boosting. Also, we show how it is possible to control the amplitude and the offset of the chaotic signals generated for some technological exploitation. Finally, coexisting solutions (i.e., multistability) found in the novel memristive system are further controlled based on a linear augmentation (LA) scheme. Our numerical findings demonstrated the effectiveness of the control technic through interior crisis, reverse period-doubling scenario, and symmetry restoring crisis. The coupled memristive system remains stable with its unique survived periodic attractor for higher values of the coupling strength

    How Push-To-Talk Makes Talk Less Pushy

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    This paper presents an exploratory study of college-age students using two-way, push-to-talk cellular radios. We describe the observed and reported use of cellular radio by the participants. We discuss how the half-duplex, lightweight cellular radio communication was associated with reduced interactional commitment, which meant the cellular radios could be used for a wide range of conversation styles. One such style, intermittent conversation, is characterized by response delays. Intermittent conversation is surprising in an audio medium, since it is typically associated with textual media such as instant messaging. We present design implications of our findings.Comment: 10 page

    The cerebellum could solve the motor error problem through error increase prediction

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    We present a cerebellar architecture with two main characteristics. The first one is that complex spikes respond to increases in sensory errors. The second one is that cerebellar modules associate particular contexts where errors have increased in the past with corrective commands that stop the increase in error. We analyze our architecture formally and computationally for the case of reaching in a 3D environment. In the case of motor control, we show that there are synergies of this architecture with the Equilibrium-Point hypothesis, leading to novel ways to solve the motor error problem. In particular, the presence of desired equilibrium lengths for muscles provides a way to know when the error is increasing, and which corrections to apply. In the context of Threshold Control Theory and Perceptual Control Theory we show how to extend our model so it implements anticipative corrections in cascade control systems that span from muscle contractions to cognitive operations.Comment: 34 pages (without bibliography), 13 figure
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