288 research outputs found
Synchronization of coupled neural oscillators with heterogeneous delays
We investigate the effects of heterogeneous delays in the coupling of two
excitable neural systems. Depending upon the coupling strengths and the time
delays in the mutual and self-coupling, the compound system exhibits different
types of synchronized oscillations of variable period. We analyze this
synchronization based on the interplay of the different time delays and support
the numerical results by analytical findings. In addition, we elaborate on
bursting-like dynamics with two competing timescales on the basis of the
autocorrelation function.Comment: 18 pages, 14 figure
Synchronization in complex networks
Synchronization processes in populations of locally interacting elements are
in the focus of intense research in physical, biological, chemical,
technological and social systems. The many efforts devoted to understand
synchronization phenomena in natural systems take now advantage of the recent
theory of complex networks. In this review, we report the advances in the
comprehension of synchronization phenomena when oscillating elements are
constrained to interact in a complex network topology. We also overview the new
emergent features coming out from the interplay between the structure and the
function of the underlying pattern of connections. Extensive numerical work as
well as analytical approaches to the problem are presented. Finally, we review
several applications of synchronization in complex networks to different
disciplines: biological systems and neuroscience, engineering and computer
science, and economy and social sciences.Comment: Final version published in Physics Reports. More information
available at http://synchronets.googlepages.com
Transient spatiotemporal chaos in a diffusively and synaptically coupled Morris-Lecar neuronal network
Thesis (M.S.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2014Transient spatiotemporal chaos was reported in models for chemical reactions and in experiments for turbulence in shear flow. This study shows that transient spatiotemporal chaos also exists in a diffusively coupled Morris-Lecar (ML) neuronal network, with a collapse to either a global rest state or to a state of pulse propagation. Adding synaptic coupling to this network reduces the average lifetime of spatiotemporal chaos for small to intermediate coupling strengths and almost all numbers of synapses. For large coupling strengths, close to the threshold of excitation, the average lifetime increases beyond the value for only diffusive coupling, and the collapse to the rest state dominates over the collapse to a traveling pulse state. The regime of spatiotemporal chaos is characterized by a slightly increasing Lyapunov exponent and degree of phase coherence as the number of synaptic links increases. In contrast to the diffusive network, the pulse solution must not be asymptotic in the presence of synapses. The fact that chaos could be transient in higher dimensional systems, such as the one being explored in this study, point to its presence in every day life. Transient spatiotemporal chaos in a network of coupled neurons and the associated chaotic saddle provide a possibility for switching between metastable states observed in information processing and brain function. Such transient dynamics have been observed experimentally by Mazor, when stimulating projection neurons in the locust antennal lobe with different odors
Synchronization in STDP-driven memristive neural networks with time-varying topology
Synchronization is a widespread phenomenon in the brain. Despite numerous
studies, the specific parameter configurations of the synaptic network
structure and learning rules needed to achieve robust and enduring
synchronization in neurons driven by spike-timing-dependent plasticity (STDP)
and temporal networks subject to homeostatic structural plasticity (HSP) rules
remain unclear. Here, we bridge this gap by determining the configurations
required to achieve high and stable degrees of complete synchronization (CS)
and phase synchronization (PS) in time-varying small-world and random neural
networks driven by STDP and HSP. In particular, we found that decreasing
(which enhances the strengthening effect of STDP on the average synaptic
weight) and increasing (which speeds up the swapping rate of synapses
between neurons) always lead to higher and more stable degrees of CS and PS in
small-world and random networks, provided that the network parameters such as
the synaptic time delay , the average degree , and
the rewiring probability have some appropriate values. When ,
, and are not fixed at these appropriate values, the
degree and stability of CS and PS may increase or decrease when increases,
depending on the network topology. It is also found that the time delay
can induce intermittent CS and PS whose occurrence is independent .
Our results could have applications in designing neuromorphic circuits for
optimal information processing and transmission via synchronization phenomena.Comment: 28 pages, 86 references, 8 figures, 2 Table
Effect of the Topology and Delayed Interactions in Neuronal Networks Synchronization
As important as the intrinsic properties of an individual nervous cell stands the network of neurons in which it is embedded and by virtue of which it acquires great part of its responsiveness and functionality. In this study we have explored how the topological properties and conduction delays of several classes of neural networks affect the capacity of their constituent cells to establish well-defined temporal relations among firing of their action potentials. This ability of a population of neurons to produce and maintain a millisecond-precise coordinated firing (either evoked by external stimuli or internally generated) is central to neural codes exploiting precise spike timing for the representation and communication of information. Our results, based on extensive simulations of conductance-based type of neurons in an oscillatory regime, indicate that only certain topologies of networks allow for a coordinated firing at a local and long-range scale simultaneously. Besides network architecture, axonal conduction delays are also observed to be another important factor in the generation of coherent spiking. We report that such communication latencies not only set the phase difference between the oscillatory activity of remote neural populations but determine whether the interconnected cells can set in any coherent firing at all. In this context, we have also investigated how the balance between the network synchronizing effects and the dispersive drift caused by inhomogeneities in natural firing frequencies across neurons is resolved. Finally, we show that the observed roles of conduction delays and frequency dispersion are not particular to canonical networks but experimentally measured anatomical networks such as the macaque cortical network can display the same type of behavior
Adaptive dynamical networks
It is a fundamental challenge to understand how the function of a network is related to its structural organization. Adaptive dynamical networks represent a broad class of systems that can change their connectivity over time depending on their dynamical state. The most important feature of such systems is that their function depends on their structure and vice versa. While the properties of static networks have been extensively investigated in the past, the study of adaptive networks is much more challenging. Moreover, adaptive dynamical networks are of tremendous importance for various application fields, in particular, for the models for neuronal synaptic plasticity, adaptive networks in chemical, epidemic, biological, transport, and social systems, to name a few. In this review, we provide a detailed description of adaptive dynamical networks, show their applications in various areas of research, highlight their dynamical features and describe the arising dynamical phenomena, and give an overview of the available mathematical methods developed for understanding adaptive dynamical networks
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