| Literature DB >> 26396647 |
Nicholas Jarman1, Chris Trengove2, Erik Steur2, Ivan Tyukin3, Cees van Leeuwen2.
Abstract
A modular small-world topology in functional and anatomical networks of the cortex is eminently suitable as an information processing architecture. This structure was shown in model studies to arise adaptively; it emerges through rewiring of network connections according to patterns of synchrony in ongoing oscillatory neural activity. However, in order to improve the applicability of such models to the cortex, spatial characteristics of cortical connectivity need to be respected, which were previously neglected. For this purpose we consider networks endowed with a metric by embedding them into a physical space. We provide an adaptive rewiring model with a spatial distance function and a corresponding spatially local rewiring bias. The spatially constrained adaptive rewiring principle is able to steer the evolving network topology to small world status, even more consistently so than without spatial constraints. Locally biased adaptive rewiring results in a spatial layout of the connectivity structure, in which topologically segregated modules correspond to spatially segregated regions, and these regions are linked by long-range connections. The principle of locally biased adaptive rewiring, thus, may explain both the topological connectivity structure and spatial distribution of connections between neuronal units in a large-scale cortical architecture.Keywords: Adaptive rewiring; Coupled chaotic maps; Modular small world networks; Spatial self-organization; Synchronization
Year: 2014 PMID: 26396647 PMCID: PMC4571644 DOI: 10.1007/s11571-014-9288-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cogn Neurodyn ISSN: 1871-4080 Impact factor: 5.082