
Rapidly forming, slowly evolving, spatial patterns from quasi-cycle Mexican Hat coupling
Author(s) -
Priscilla E. Greenwood,
Lawrence M. Ward
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
mathematical biosciences and engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.451
H-Index - 45
eISSN - 1551-0018
pISSN - 1547-1063
DOI - 10.3934/mbe.2019338
Subject(s) - amplitude , physics , coupling (piping) , statistical physics , synchronization (alternating current) , phase synchronization , pattern formation , spatial ecology , phase (matter) , mathematics , topology (electrical circuits) , quantum mechanics , combinatorics , materials science , ecology , metallurgy , genetics , biology
Alattice-indexed familyof stochasticprocesses hasquasi-cycle oscillationsif itsotherwise-damped oscillations are sustained by noise. Such a family performs the reaction part of a discrete stochastic reaction-diffusion system when we insert a local Mexican Hat-type, difference of Gaussians, coupling on a one-dimensional and on a two-dimensional lattice. Quasi-cycles are a proposed mech-anism for the production of neural oscillations, and Mexican Hat coupling is ubiquitous in the brain. Thus this combination might provide insight into the function of neural oscillations in the brain. Im-portantly, we study this system only in the transient case, on time intervals before saturation occurs. In one dimension, for weak coupling, we find that the phases of the coupled quasi-cycles synchronize (es-tablish a relatively constant relationship, or phase lock) rapidly at coupling strengths lower than those required to produce spatial patterns of their amplitudes. In two dimensions the amplitude patterns form more quickly, but there remain parameter regimes in which phase synchronization patterns form with-out being accompanied by clear amplitude patterns. At higher coupling strengths we find patterns both of phase synchronization and of amplitude (resembling Turing patterns) corresponding to the patterns of phase synchronization. Specific properties of these patterns are controlled by the parameters of the reaction and of the Mexican Hat coupling.