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Synaptic Plasticity: from Chimera States to Synchronicity Oscillations in Multilayer Neural Networks

Overview
Journal Cogn Neurodyn
Publisher Springer
Specialty Neurology
Date 2024 Dec 23
PMID 39712111
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Abstract

This research scrutinizes the simultaneous evolution of each layer within a multilayered complex neural network and elucidates the effect of synaptic plasticity on inter-layer dynamics. In the absence of synaptic plasticity, a predominant feedforward effect is observed, resulting in the manifestation of complete synchrony in deep networks, with each layer assuming a chimera state. A significant increase in the number of synchronized neurons is observed as the layers augment, culminating in complete synchronization in the deeper sections. The study categorizes the layers into three distinct parts: the initial layers (1-4) demonstrate the emergence of non-uniformity in the random firing of neurons; the middle layers (5-7) exhibit an amplification of this non-uniformity, forming a higher degree of synchronization; and the final layers (8-10) display a completely synchronized process. The introduction of synaptic plasticity disrupts this synchrony, inducing periodic oscillation characteristics across layers. The specificity of these oscillations is notably accentuated with increasing network depth. These insights shed light on the interplay between neural network complexity and synaptic plasticity in influencing synchronization dynamics, presenting avenues for enhanced neural network architectures and refined neuroscientific models. The findings underscore the imperative to delve deeper into the implications of synaptic plasticity on the structure and function of intricate multi-layer neural networks.

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