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Subbarrel patterns in somatosensory cortical barrels can emerge from local dynamic instabilities
Authors
A Gierer
AM Turing
+26 more
Bard Ermentrout
C Welker
CA Bennett-Clarke
Daniel J. Simons
E Coddington
EF Keller
H Meinhardt
H Meinhardt
HK Hartline
J Murray
Karl J. Friston
KD Miller
KD Miller
KM Louderback
M Golubitsky
M Inan
Peter W. Land
PW Land
PW Land
R Linsker
RM Bruno
SL Senft
SM Catalano
TA Woolsey
VA McIlvain
WL Weller
Publication date
1 October 2009
Publisher
'Public Library of Science (PLoS)'
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
Complex spatial patterning, common in the brain as well as in other biological systems, can emerge as a result of dynamic interactions that occur locally within developing structures. In the rodent somatosensory cortex, groups of neurons called "barrels" correspond to individual whiskers on the contralateral face. Barrels themselves often contain subbarrels organized into one of a few characteristic patterns. Here we demonstrate that similar patterns can be simulated by means of local growth-promoting and growth-retarding interactions within the circular domains of single barrels. The model correctly predicts that larger barrels contain more spatially complex subbarrel patterns, suggesting that the development of barrels and of the patterns within them may be understood in terms of some relatively simple dynamic processes. We also simulate the full nonlinear equations to demonstrate the predictive value of our linear analysis. Finally, we show that the pattern formation is robust with respect to the geometry of the barrel by simulating patterns on a realistically shaped barrel domain. This work shows how simple pattern forming mechanisms can explain neural wiring both qualitatively and quantitatively even in complex and irregular domains. © 2009 Ermentrout et al
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