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Analysis of neural clusters due to deep brain stimulation pulses.

Daniel KuelbsJacob DunefskyBharat MongaJeff Moehlis
Published in: Biological cybernetics (2020)
Deep brain stimulation (DBS) is an established method for treating pathological conditions such as Parkinson's disease, dystonia, Tourette syndrome, and essential tremor. While the precise mechanisms which underly the effectiveness of DBS are not fully understood, several theoretical studies of populations of neural oscillators stimulated by periodic pulses have suggested that this may be related to clustering, in which subpopulations of the neurons are synchronized, but the subpopulations are desynchronized with respect to each other. The details of the clustering behavior depend on the frequency and amplitude of the stimulation in a complicated way. In the present study, we investigate how the number of clusters and their stability properties, bifurcations, and basins of attraction can be understood in terms of one-dimensional maps defined on the circle. Moreover, we generalize this analysis to stimuli that consist of pulses with alternating properties, which provide additional degrees of freedom in the design of DBS stimuli. Our results illustrate how the complicated properties of clustering behavior for periodically forced neural oscillator populations can be understood in terms of a much simpler dynamical system.
Keyphrases
  • deep brain stimulation
  • parkinson disease
  • obsessive compulsive disorder
  • single cell
  • rna seq
  • randomized controlled trial
  • systematic review
  • spinal cord
  • spinal cord injury
  • density functional theory