Amit Dhurandhar, Hongyang Li, et al.
Chemical Senses
It is widely recognized that balancing excitation and inhibition is important in the nervous system. When such a balance is sought by global strategies, few modes remain poised close to instability, and all other modes are strongly stable. Here we present a simple abstract model in which this balance is sought locally by units following "anti-Hebbian" evolution: all degrees of freedom achieve a close balance of excitation and inhibition and become "critical" in the dynamical sense. At long time scales, a complex "breakout" dynamics ensues in which different modes of the system oscillate between prominence and extinction; the model develops various long-tailed statistical behaviors and may become self-organized critical. © 2009 The American Physical Society.
Amit Dhurandhar, Hongyang Li, et al.
Chemical Senses
Victor M. Eguíluz, Dante R. Chialvo, et al.
Physical Review Letters
Yuan Liu, Guillermo A. Cecchi, et al.
IS&T/SPIE Electronic Imaging 2006
Guillermo A. Cecchi, Rahul Garg, et al.
ISBI 2008