Nonlocal Ginzburg-Landau equation for cortical pattern formation.
Nonlocal Ginzburg-Landau equation for cortical pattern formation.
Paul C Bressloff and Zachary P Kilpatrick
Phys. Rev. E 78 (2008), 041916
Abstract:We show how a nonlocal version of the real
Ginzburg-Landau (GL) equation arises in a large-scale recurrent
network model of primary visual cortex. We treat cortex as a
continuous two-dimensional sheet of cells that signal both the
position and orientation of a local visual stimulus. The recurrent
circuitry is decomposed into a local part, which contributes primarily
to the orientation tuning properties of the cells, and a long-range
part that introduces spatial correlations. We assume that (a) the
local network exists in a balanced state such that it operates close
to a point of instability and (b) the long-range connections are weak
and scale with the bifurcation parameter of the dynamical instability
generated by the local circuitry. Carrying out a perturbation
expansion with respect to the long-range coupling strength then
generates a nonlocal coupling term in the GL amplitude equation. We
use the nonlocal GL equation to analyze how axonal propagation delays
arising from the slow conduction velocities of the long-range connections affect spontaneous pattern formation.
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