Inference and segmentation in cortical processing
Yuan Liu, Guillermo A. Cecchi, et al.
IS&T/SPIE Electronic Imaging 2006
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.
Yuan Liu, Guillermo A. Cecchi, et al.
IS&T/SPIE Electronic Imaging 2006
Mariano Sigman, Guillermo A. Cecchi
PNAS
Jadyn Trayvick, Sarah B. Barkley, et al.
Psychiatry Research
María J. Leone, Diego Fernandez-Slezak, et al.
Frontiers in Psychology