Spiking at the edge
Colin Scheibner, Hillel Ori, Adam E. Cohen, Vincenzo Vitelli

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how boundaries in reaction-diffusion systems can induce and sustain spiking activity even when the bulk media are non-excitable, revealing a robust interfacial spiking mechanism with broad implications.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of edge spiking at interfaces of non-excitable media, supported by analytical phase diagrams and experimental relevance, expanding understanding of spiking phenomena in heterogeneous systems.
Findings
Boundaries can generate spiking in non-excitable media.
Weak diffusion at interfaces can sustain spiking activity.
The phase diagram predicts conditions for edge spiking.
Abstract
Excitable media, ranging from bioelectric tissues and chemical oscillators to forest fires and competing populations, are nonlinear, spatially extended systems capable of spiking. Most investigations of excitable media consider situations where the amplifying and suppressing forces necessary for spiking coexist at every point in space. In this case, spiking requires a fine-tuned ratio between local amplification and suppression strengths. But, in Nature and engineered systems, these forces can be segregated in space, forming structures like interfaces and boundaries. Here, we show how boundaries can generate and protect spiking if the reacting components can spread out: even arbitrarily weak diffusion can cause spiking at the edge between two non-excitable media. This edge spiking is a robust phenomenon that can occur even if the ratio between amplification and suppression does not…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeural dynamics and brain function · Photoreceptor and optogenetics research · Nonlinear Dynamics and Pattern Formation
