Skip to content
This repository has been archived by the owner on Mar 30, 2022. It is now read-only.

Gerster et al. 2020. “FitzHugh–Nagumo Oscillators on Complex Networks Mimic Epileptic-Seizure-Related Synchronization Phenomena.” Chaos 30 (12): 123130.

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

moritz-gerster/seizure_simulation

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

16 Commits
 
 

Repository files navigation

DOI

Simulation of Epileptic Seizures

Gerster, Moritz, Rico Berner, Jakub Sawicki, Anna Zakharova, Antonín Škoch, Jaroslav Hlinka, Klaus Lehnertz, and Eckehard Schöll. 2020. “FitzHugh–Nagumo Oscillators on Complex Networks Mimic Epileptic-Seizure-Related Synchronization Phenomena.” Chaos 30 (12): 123130 https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0021420.

The code to reproduce the simulations in the article is based on https://github.com/kekstoaster/Chimera.

Abstract

We study patterns of partial synchronization in a network of FitzHugh–Nagumo oscillators with empirical structural connectivity measured in human subjects. We report the spontaneous occurrence of synchronization phenomena that closely resemble the ones seen during epileptic seizures in humans. In order to obtain deeper insights into the interplay between dynamics and network topology, we perform long-term simulations of oscillatory dynamics on different paradigmatic network structures: random networks, regular nonlocally coupled ring networks, ring networks with fractal connectivities, and small-world networks with various rewiring probability. Among these networks, a small-world network with intermediate rewiring probability best mimics the findings achieved with the simulations using the empirical structural connectivity. For the other network topologies, either no spontaneously occurring epileptic-seizure-related synchronization phenomena can be observed in the simulated dynamics, or the overall degree of synchronization remains high throughout the simulation. This indicates that a topology with some balance between regularity and randomness favors the self-initiation and self-termination of episodes of seizure-like strong synchronization.

Video

Fig9s

Talk

Test

About

Gerster et al. 2020. “FitzHugh–Nagumo Oscillators on Complex Networks Mimic Epileptic-Seizure-Related Synchronization Phenomena.” Chaos 30 (12): 123130.

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published