Understanding the collective motion of networks of oscillators is crucial in many contexts, starting from neuronal circuits [1]. So far, most of the efforts have been devoted to the characterization of strong forms of synchronization. However, more subtle phenomena, like the onset of coherent oscillations in an ensemble of neurons can also play a relevant role for information coding. A peculiar coherent state, termed Chimera, appears in two symmetrically coupled populations of oscillators, where a population fully synchronizes while the other exhibit an asynchronous dynamics [2]. This can represents an idealized mathematical representation of the so-called unihemispheric sleep. Many creatures sleep with only half their brain at a time [3]. Such phenomenon was first reported in dolphins and other sea mammals and, recently, in birds; when brain waves are recorded, the awake side of the brain shows desynchronized electrical activity, corresponding to millions of neurons oscillating out of phase, whereas the sleeping side is highly synchronized. ... ...
Chimera states and collective chaos in pulse-coupled neural networks
Simona Olmi;Antonio Politi;Alessandro Torcini
2011
Abstract
Understanding the collective motion of networks of oscillators is crucial in many contexts, starting from neuronal circuits [1]. So far, most of the efforts have been devoted to the characterization of strong forms of synchronization. However, more subtle phenomena, like the onset of coherent oscillations in an ensemble of neurons can also play a relevant role for information coding. A peculiar coherent state, termed Chimera, appears in two symmetrically coupled populations of oscillators, where a population fully synchronizes while the other exhibit an asynchronous dynamics [2]. This can represents an idealized mathematical representation of the so-called unihemispheric sleep. Many creatures sleep with only half their brain at a time [3]. Such phenomenon was first reported in dolphins and other sea mammals and, recently, in birds; when brain waves are recorded, the awake side of the brain shows desynchronized electrical activity, corresponding to millions of neurons oscillating out of phase, whereas the sleeping side is highly synchronized. ... ...| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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