Fig. 5: Wavelength and speed distributions change with connection distance and conduction velocity parameters. | Nature Communications

Fig. 5: Wavelength and speed distributions change with connection distance and conduction velocity parameters.

From: Spontaneous traveling waves naturally emerge from horizontal fiber time delays and travel through locally asynchronous-irregular states

Fig. 5

a Distribution of wavelengths exceeding the 99th percentile of a spatial shuffle for networks simulated across a range of Gaussian sigma values for the topographic connection probability. b 2D FFT for the topographic network with delays produced by 0.2 m/s conduction velocities. The colored lines match the slopes of the concentration of spatiotemporal energy across different simulations with conduction velocities ranging from 0.1 to 0.6 m/s. c Significant wavelengths (white pixels) were strongly present in a network with a mix of topographically (90%) and randomly (10%) connected projections and a range of conduction velocities (0.1–0.6 m/s). d CDFs for the simulation in (c) and its shuffle (blue and red, respectively).

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