Emergence of event cascades in inhomogeneous networks.

Tomokatsu Onaga, Shigeru Shinomoto
Author Information
  1. Tomokatsu Onaga: Department of Physics, Kyoto University, Kyoto 606-8502, Japan.
  2. Shigeru Shinomoto: Department of Physics, Kyoto University, Kyoto 606-8502, Japan.

Abstract

There is a commonality among contagious diseases, tweets, and neuronal firings that past events facilitate the future occurrence of events. The spread of events has been extensively studied such that the systems exhibit catastrophic chain reactions if the interaction represented by the ratio of reproduction exceeds unity; however, their subthreshold states are not fully understood. Here, we report that these systems are possessed by nonstationary cascades of event-occurrences already in the subthreshold regime. Event cascades can be harmful in some contexts, when the peak-demand causes vaccine shortages, heavy traffic on communication lines, but may be beneficial in other contexts, such that spontaneous activity in neural networks may be used to generate motion or store memory. Thus it is important to comprehend the mechanism by which such cascades appear, and consider controlling a system to tame or facilitate fluctuations in the event-occurrences. The critical interaction for the emergence of cascades depends greatly on the network structure in which individuals are connected. We demonstrate that we can predict whether cascades may emerge, given information about the interactions between individuals. Furthermore, we develop a method of reallocating connections among individuals so that event cascades may be either impeded or impelled in a network.

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MeSH Term

Humans
Memory
Models, Theoretical
Neural Networks, Computer
Neurons

Word Cloud

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