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JOURNALS // Uspekhi Fizicheskikh Nauk // Archive

UFN, 2010 Volume 180, Number 4, Pages 371–387 (Mi ufn906)

This article is cited in 77 papers

REVIEWS OF TOPICAL PROBLEMS

Nonlinear dynamics of the brain: emotion and cognition

M. I. Rabinovich, M. K. Muezzinoglu

9500 Gilman Dr., University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093-0402, USA

Abstract: Experimental investigations of neural system functioning and brain activity are standardly based on the assumption that perceptions, emotions, and cognitive functions can be understood by analyzing steady-state neural processes and static tomographic snapshots. The new approaches discussed in this review are based on the analysis of transient processes and metastable states. Transient dynamics is characterized by two basic properties, structural stability and information sensitivity. The ideas and methods that we discuss provide an explanation for the occurrence of and successive transitions between metastable states observed in experiments, and offer new approaches to behavior analysis. Models of the emotional and cognitive functions of the brain are suggested. The mathematical object that represents the observed transient brain processes in the phase space of the model is a structurally stable heteroclinic channel. The possibility of using the suggested models to construct a quantitative theory of some emotional and cognitive functions is illustrated.

PACS: 05.45.-a, 87.18.Sn, 87.19.L-, 87.19.Ij

Received: June 26, 2009
Revised: August 4, 2009

DOI: 10.3367/UFNr.0180.201004b.0371


 English version:
Physics–Uspekhi, 2010, 53:4, 357–372

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