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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Normally elliptic singular perturbation problems: local invariant manifolds and applications

Lu, Nan 18 May 2011 (has links)
In this thesis, we study the normally elliptic singular perturbation problems including both finite and infinite dimensional cases, which could also be non-autonomous. In particular, we establish the existence and smoothness of O(1) local invariant manifolds and provide various estimates which are independent of small singular parameters. We also use our results on local invariant manifolds to study the persistence of homoclinic solutions under weakly dissipative and conservative per- turbations. We apply Semi-group Theory and Lyapunov-Perron Integral Equations with some careful estimates to handle the O(1) driving force in the system so that we can approximate the full system through some simpler limiting system. In the investigation of homoclinics, a diagonalization procedure and some normal form transformation should be first carried out. Such diagonalization procedure is not trivial at all. We discuss this issue in the appendix. We use Melnikov type analysis to study the weakly dissipative case, while the conservative case is based on some energy methods. As a concrete example, we have shown rigrously the persistence of homoclinic solutions of an elastic pendulum model which may be affected by damping, external forcing and other potential fields.
2

Implications of neuronal excitability and morphology for spike-based information transmission

Hesse, Janina 29 November 2017 (has links)
Signalverarbeitung im Nervensystem hängt sowohl von der Netzwerkstruktur, als auch den zellulären Eigenschaften der Nervenzellen ab. In dieser Abhandlung werden zwei zelluläre Eigenschaften im Hinblick auf ihre funktionellen Anpassungsmöglichkeiten untersucht: Es wird gezeigt, dass neuronale Morphologie die Signalweiterleitung unter Berücksichtigung energetischer Beschränkungen verstärken kann, und dass selbst kleine Änderungen in biophysikalischen Parametern die Aktivierungsbifurkation in Nervenzellen, und damit deren Informationskodierung, wechseln können. Im ersten Teil dieser Abhandlung wird, unter Verwendung von mathematischen Modellen und Daten, die Hypothese aufgestellt, dass Energie-effiziente Signalweiterleitung als starker Evolutionsdruck für unterschiedliche Zellkörperlagen bei Nervenzellen wirkt. Um Energie zu sparen, kann die Signalweiterleitung vom Dendrit zum Axon verstärkt werden, indem relativ kleine Zellkörper zwischen Dendrit und Axon eingebaut werden, während relativ große Zellkörper besser ausgelagert werden. Im zweiten Teil wird gezeigt, dass biophysikalische Parameter, wie Temperatur, Membranwiderstand oder Kapazität, den Feuermechanismus des Neurons ändern, und damit gleichfalls Aktionspotential-basierte Informationsverarbeitung. Diese Arbeit identifiziert die sogenannte "saddle-node-loop" (Sattel-Knoten-Schlaufe) Bifurkation als den Übergang, der besonders drastische funktionale Auswirkungen hat. Neben der Änderung neuronaler Filtereigenschaften sowie der Ankopplung an Stimuli, führt die "saddle-node-loop" Bifurkation zu einer Erhöhung der Netzwerk-Synchronisation, was möglicherweise für das Auslösen von Anfällen durch Temperatur, wie bei Fieberkrämpfen, interessant sein könnte. / Signal processing in nervous systems is shaped by the connectome as well as the cellular properties of nerve cells. In this thesis, two cellular properties are investigated with respect to the functional adaptations they provide: It is shown that neuronal morphology can improve signal transmission under energetic constraints, and that even small changes in biophysical parameters can switch spike generation, and thus information encoding. In the first project of the thesis, mathematical modeling and data are deployed to suggest energy-efficient signaling as a major evolutionary pressure behind morphological adaptations of cell body location: In order to save energy, the electrical signal transmission from dendrite to axon can be enhanced if a relatively small cell body is located between dendrite and axon, while a relatively large cell body should be externalized. In the second project, it is shown that biophysical parameters, such as temperature, membrane leak or capacitance, can transform neuronal excitability (i.e., the spike onset bifurcation) and, with that, spike-based information processing. This thesis identifies the so-called saddle-node-loop bifurcation as the transition with particularly drastic functional implications. Besides altering neuronal filters and stimulus locking, the saddle-node-loop bifurcation leads to an increase in network synchronization, which may potentially be relevant for the initiation of seizures in response to increased temperature, such as during fever cramps.

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