Foreword by Walter J. Freeman.
The induction of unconsciousness using anesthetic agents
demonstrates that the cerebral cortex can operate in two very
different behavioral modes: alert and responsive vs. unaware and
quiescent. But the states of wakefulness and sleep are not
single-neuron properties---they emerge as bulk properties of
cooperating populations of neurons, with the switchover between
states being similar to the physical change of phase observed when
water freezes or ice melts. Some brain-state transitions, such as
sleep cycling, anesthetic induction, epileptic seizure, are obvious
and detected readily with a few EEG electrodes; others, such as the
emergence of gamma rhythms during cognition, or the ultra-slow BOLD
rhythms of relaxed free-association, are much more subtle. The
unifying theme of this book is the notion that all of these bulk
changes in brain behavior can be treated as phase transitions
between distinct brain states.
Modeling Phase Transitions in the Brain contains chapter
contributions from leading researchers who apply state-space
methods, network models, and biophysically-motivated continuum
approaches to investigate a range of neuroscientifically relevant
problems that include analysis of nonstationary EEG time-series;
network topologies that limit epileptic spreading; saddle--node
bifurcations for anesthesia, sleep-cycling, and the wake--sleep
switch; prediction of dynamical and noise-induced spatiotemporal
instabilities underlying BOLD, alpha-, and gamma-band Hopf
oscillations, gap-junction-moderated Turing structures, and
Hopf-Turing interactions leading to cortical waves.
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