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Visualizzazione post con etichetta pause. Mostra tutti i post
Visualizzazione post con etichetta pause. Mostra tutti i post

sabato 9 agosto 2025

# gst: stability of twisted states; the role of phase lag, pairwise and higher-order interactions.

<< ️Stability analysis remains a key focus in the nonlinear field. The stability of oscillator networks considering phase-lag coupling is still an unsolved puzzle. Here, (AA)  investigate the linear stability using the maximal Lyapunov exponent and evaluate the basin stability by numerical simulations. >>

<< ️The results show that the phase lag has no significant effect on the proportion of twisted states with linear stability and on their basin sizes, without considering higher-order interactions. In contrast to the stabilizing effect of higher-order interactions on twisted states, pairwise coupling suppresses their linear stability but enhances their basin stability. >>

<< ️When pairwise coupling dominates, phase lag acts to strengthen the linear stability of the twisted state. Furthermore, the phase lag reduces the degree of ordering of the system and shrinks the basin of the twisted state. >>

<< ️These results highlight the synergistic effect of phase lag with pairwise and higher-order interactions on twisted-state basins. >>

Xueqin Wang, Dong Yu, et al. Stability of twisted states: The role of phase lag, pairwise and higher-order interactions. Phys. Rev. E 112, 024202. Aug 1, 2025.

Also: network, pause, chimera, in https://www.inkgmr.net/kwrds.html 

Keywords: gst, network, chimera, phase lags, pause, coupled oscillators, synchronization.

giovedì 7 agosto 2025

# behav: make silence speak for itself.

<< ️Silence is a common phenomenon in classrooms, yet its implicit nature limits a clear understanding of students' underlying learning statuses. >>

<< ️This (AA) study proposed a nuanced framework to classify classroom silence based on class events and student status, and examined neurophysiological markers to reveal similarities and differences in silent states across achievement groups. (..) The study involved 54 middle school students during 34 math lessons, with simultaneous recordings of electroencephalogram (EEG), electrodermal activity (EDA), and heart rate signals, alongside video coding of classroom behaviors. >>

AA << found that high-achieving students showed no significant difference in mean EDA features between strategic silence (i.e., students choose silence deliberately) and active speaking during open questioning but exhibited higher EEG high-frequency relative power spectral density (RPSD) during strategic silence. In structural silence (i.e., students maintain silence following an external command) during directed questioning, they demonstrated significantly higher heart rates while listening to lectures compared to group activities, indicating heightened engagement. Both high- and medium-achieving students displayed elevated heart rates and EDA tonic components in structural silence during questioning compared to teaching. Furthermore, high-achieving students exhibited lower high-frequency RPSD during structural silence than strategic silence, a pattern not observed in other groups, highlighting group heterogeneity. >>

<< ️The (AA) findings contribute to validating the complexity of silence, challenge its traditional association with passivity, and offer a novel classification framework along with preliminary empirical evidence to deepen the understanding of silent learning behaviors in classroom contexts. >>

Mingxuan Gao, Jingjing Chen, et al. Make Silence Speak for Itself: a multi-modal learning analytic approach with neurophysiological data. arXiv: 2507.21063v1 [q-bio.NC]. May 23, 2025.

Also: silence, pause, behav, brain, in https://www.inkgmr.net/kwrds.html 

Keywords: behavior, brain, pause, silence, strategic silence, structural silence

lunedì 31 marzo 2025

# gst: synchronization and chaos in complex systems with delayed interactions.


<< Explaining the wide range of dynamics observed in ecological communities is challenging due to the large number of species involved, the complex network of interactions among them, and the influence of multiple environmental variables. >>

AA << consider a general framework to model the dynamics of species-rich communities under the effects of external environmental factors, showing that it naturally leads to delayed interactions between species, and analyze the impact of such memory effects on population dynamics. >>

<< Employing the generalized Lotka-Volterra equations with time delays and random interactions, (AA) characterize the resulting dynamical phases in terms of the statistical properties of community interactions. (Their) findings reveal that memory effects can generate persistent and synchronized oscillations in species abundances in sufficiently competitive communities. This provides an additional explanation for synchronization in large communities, complementing known mechanisms such as predator-prey cycles and environmental periodic variability. >>

<< Furthermore, (AA) show that when reciprocal interactions are negatively correlated, time delays alone can induce chaotic behavior. This suggests that ecological complexity is not a prerequisite for unpredictable population dynamics, as intrinsic memory effects are sufficient to generate long-term fluctuations in species abundances. >>

Francesco Ferraro, Christian Grilletta, et al. Synchronization and chaos in complex ecological communities with delayed interactions. arXiv: 2503.21551v1 [q-bio.PE]. Mar 27, 2025.

Also: pause, silence, random, chaos, network, in https://www.inkgmr.net/kwrds.html 

Keywords: gst, pause, silence, random, chaos, chaotic behavior, network, delay, time delay, delayed interactions, random interactions, memory effect 

sabato 29 marzo 2025

# gst: apropos of multiple delays, transitions to intermittent chaos in quorum sensing-inspired dynamics.

<< This study analyses the dynamical consequences of heterogeneous temporal delays within a quorum sensing-inspired (QS-inspired) system, specifically addressing the differential response kinetics of two subpopulations to signalling molecules. >>️

<< The analysis reveals the critical role of multiple, dissimilar delays in modulating system dynamics and inducing bifurcations. Numerical simulations, conducted in conjunction with analytical results, reveal the emergence of periodic self-sustained oscillations and intermittent chaotic behaviour. These observations emphasise the intricate relationship between temporal heterogeneity and the stability landscape of systems exhibiting QS-inspired dynamics. This interplay highlights the capacity for temporal variations to induce complex dynamical transitions within such systems. >>️

AA << findings show that the presence of multiple delays, particularly when characterised by significant disparities in magnitude, can dramatically alter the system’s stability features and promote the emergence of complex nonlinear oscillatory behaviour. >>️

<< Upon explicitly incorporating distinct delays for different state-components, (AA) have shown how temporal factors can dramatically influence system stability and give rise to a spectrum of complex dynamical behaviours, including intermittent chaos. >>

Anahí Flores, Marcos A. González, Víctor F. Breña-Medina. Transitions to Intermittent Chaos in Quorum Sensing Dynamics. arXiv: 2503.14363v2 [nlin.CD]. Mar 19, 2025.

Also: intermittency, pause, silence, transitionchaos, in https://www.inkgmr.net/kwrds.html 

Keywords: gst, intermittency, pause, silence, transitions, chaos 

lunedì 3 marzo 2025

# gst: apropos of transitions to turbulence, pulsatility delays the transition to sustained turbulence in quasi-2D shear flows

<< Two-dimensional disturbances require high Reynolds numbers to incite transition from a steady base flow, as transient growth is modest. With the addition of an oscillatory base flow component, (AA) work shows that the transient growth experienced by two-dimensional initial perturbations is often well above that provided by the steady component. >>

<< However, as has been shown for three-dimensional flows [B. Pier and P. J. Schmid, J. Fluid Mech. 926, A11 (2021)], the transient growth is almost entirely composed of modal intracyclic growth, rather than a transient mechanism which takes advantage of non-normality. This lack of transient growth, relative to the severe decay induced by the favorable pressure gradient during the acceleration phase of the oscillatory base flow, only ever delays the transition to sustained turbulence. >>

<< Thus, a nonoscillatory driving force remains the most efficient strategy for sustained turbulence in quasi-two-dimensional shear flows. The only benefit provided by pulsatility is that the amplitude of the initial condition required to trigger intermittent turbulence is orders of magnitude smaller. >>️

Christopher J. Camobreco, Alban Pothérat, Gregory J. Sheard. Pulsatility delays the transition to sustained turbulence in quasi-two-dimensional shear flows. Phys. Rev. Fluids 10, 023905. Feb 25, 2025.

Also: pause, transition, turbulence, vortex, in https://www.inkgmr.net/kwrds.html 

Keywords: gst, pause, transition, turbulence, vortex


mercoledì 26 febbraio 2025

# gst: the sleeping bacterium, shedding light on the resuscitation mechanism.

<< The revival mechanism in dormant bacteria is a puzzling and open issue. (AA) propose a model of information diffusion on a regular grid where agents represent bacteria and their mutual interactions implement quorum sensing. Agents may have different metabolic characteristics corresponding to multiple phenotypes. The intra/inter phenotype cooperation is analyzed under different metabolic and productivity conditions. (AA) study the interactions between rapidly reproducing active bacteria and non-reproducing quiescent bacteria (thus) highlight the conditions under which the quiescent bacteria may revive. The occurrence of revival is generally related to a change in environmental conditions. (AA) results support this picture showing that revival can be mediated by the presence of different catalyst bacteria that produce the necessary resources. >>️

Eleonora Alfinito, Matteo Beccaria. The sleeping bacterium: shedding light on the resuscitation mechanism. arXiv: 2501.09366v1 [physics.bio-ph]. Jan 16, 2025.


Keywords: gst, pause, sleep, dormant, quiescence, resuscitation, bacterium 


martedì 28 gennaio 2025

# gst: tuning to the edge of instability (in the cochlea)


<< Sound produces surface waves along the cochlea's basilar membrane. To achieve the ear's astonishing frequency resolution and sensitivity to faint sounds, dissipation in the cochlea must be canceled via active processes in hair cells, effectively bringing the cochlea to the edge of instability. But how can the cochlea be globally tuned to the edge of instability with only local feedback? >>

<< Surprisingly, (AA) find the basilar membrane supports two qualitatively distinct sets of modes: a continuum of localized modes and a small number of collective extended modes. Localized modes sharply peak at their resonant position and are largely uncoupled. As a result, they can be amplified almost independently from each other by local hair cells via feedback reminiscent of self-organized criticality. >>

<< However, this amplification can destabilize the collective extended modes; avoiding such instabilities places limits on possible molecular mechanisms for active feedback in hair cells. >>

AA << work illuminates how and under what conditions individual hair cells can collectively create a critical cochlea. >>️

Asheesh S. Momi, Michael C. Abbott, et al. Hair Cells in the Cochlea Must Tune Resonant Modes to the Edge of Instability without Destabilizing Collective Modes. PRX Life 3, 013001. Jan 2, 2025.

Also: sound, music, pause, silence, instability, in https://www.inkgmr.net/kwrds.html 

Keywords: gst, acoustics, bifurcations, sensory processes, sound detection, auditory system, ear, criticality, self-organized criticality, sound, music, pause, silence, instability


sabato 15 luglio 2023

# brain: the sense of hearing, the sense of silence.


<< Do we only hear sounds? Or can we also hear silence? These questions are the subject of a centuries-old philosophical debate between two camps: the perceptual view (we literally hear silence), and the cognitive view (we only judge or infer silence). >>

<< In all cases (concerning seven experiments), silences elicited temporal distortions perfectly analogous to their sound-based counterparts, suggesting that auditory processing treats moments of silence the way it treats sounds. Silence is truly perceived, not merely inferred. >>️
Rui Zhe Goh, Ian B. Phillips, Chaz Firestone. The perception of silence. 
PNAS. 120 (29) e2301463120. Jul 10, 2023. 

Roberto Molar Candanosa. The sound of silence? Researchers prove we can  hear it. Johns Hopkins University - HUB. Jul 11, 2023. 

Researchers Prove We Hear the 
Sound of Silence. Jul 10, 2023. 

Also: silence, pause, sound, noise, perception, brain, in https://www.inkgmr.net/kwrds.html 

Keywords:  brain, perception, sound, noise, pause, silence


giovedì 12 agosto 2021

# brain: brain images of silence

<< When imagining music, the musicians' brain activity had the opposite electrical polarity to when they listened to it -- indicating different brain activations -- but the same type of activity as for imagery occurred in silent moments of the songs when people would have expected a note but there wasn't one. >>

<< There is no sensory input during silence and imagined music, so the neural activity we discovered is coming purely from the brain's predictions e.g., the brain's internal model of music. Even though the silent time-intervals do not have an input sound, we found consistent patterns of neural activity in those intervals, indicating that the brain reacts to both notes and silences of music. Ultimately, this underlines that music is more than a sensory experience for the brain as it engages the brain in a continuous attempt of predicting upcoming musical events. Our study has isolated the neural activity produced by that prediction process. And our results suggest that such prediction processes are at the foundation of both music listening and imagery. >> Giovanni Di Liberto. 

The music of silence: Imagining a song triggers similar brain activity to moments of mid-music silence. Trinity College Dublin. Aug 3, 2021. 


Guilhem Marion, Giovanni M. Di Liberto,  Shihab A. Shamma. The Music of Silence. Part I: Responses to Musical Imagery Encode Melodic Expectations and Acoustics. Journal of Neuroscience  JN-RM-0183-21. doi: 10.1523/ JNEUROSCI.0183-21.2021. 2 Aug 2, 2021.


Giovanni M. Di Liberto, Guilhem Marion,  Shihab A. Shamma. The music of silence. Part II: Music Listening Induces Imagery Responses. Journal of Neuroscience JN-RM-0184-21. doi: 10.1523/ JNEUROSCI.0184-21.2021. 
Aug 2, 2021.


Also

2123 - le dislocazioni pausali di Theo. 
(quasi-stochastic poetry). Notes. Feb 26, 2007.


A pause (acyclic pauses?)  approach to enhance and manage creativity. Mar 23, 2019.


We pronounce words more slowly compared with verbs and sometimes pause. May 20, 2018.