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Noise facilitates entrainment of a population of uncoupled limit cycle oscillators.

Vojtech KumpostLennart HilbertRalf Mikut
Published in: Journal of the Royal Society, Interface (2023)
Many biological oscillators share two properties: they are subject to stochastic fluctuations (noise) and they must reliably adjust their period to changing environmental conditions (entrainment). While noise seems to distort the ability of single oscillators to entrain, in populations of uncoupled oscillators noise allows population-level entrainment for a wider range of input amplitudes and periods. Here, we investigate how this effect depends on the noise intensity and the number of oscillators in the population. We have found that, if a population consists of a sufficient number of oscillators, increasing noise intensity leads to faster entrainment after a phase change of the input signal (jet lag) and increases sensitivity to low-amplitude input signals.
Keyphrases
  • air pollution
  • risk assessment
  • human health
  • genetic diversity