Environmentally Induced Amplitude Death and Firing Provocation in Large-scale Networks of Neuronal Systems

    2016, Volume 21, Numbers 7-8, pp.  840-848

    Author(s): Pankratova E. V., Kalyakulina A. I.

    We study the dynamics of multielement neuronal systems taking into account both the direct interaction between the cells via linear coupling and nondiffusive cell-to-cell communication via common environment. For the cells exhibiting individual bursting behavior, we have revealed the dependence of the network activity on its scale. Particularly, we show that small-scale networks demonstrate the inability to maintain complicated oscillations: for a small number of elements in an ensemble, the phenomenon of amplitude death is observed. The existence of threshold network scales and mechanisms causing firing in artificial and real multielement neural networks, as well as their significance for biological applications, are discussed.
    Keywords: network, dynamic environment coupling, viscosity, action potentials firing, amplitude death, stability
    Citation: Pankratova E. V., Kalyakulina A. I., Environmentally Induced Amplitude Death and Firing Provocation in Large-scale Networks of Neuronal Systems, Regular and Chaotic Dynamics, 2016, Volume 21, Numbers 7-8, pp. 840-848



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