Neural Field Equations

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Neural Field Equations

Audience

Difficulty Intermediate

Notation on this page

This is the index page for the family of equations used to model neural-population dynamics in the framework. It collects the canonical models, their relationships, and their roles in the framework.

The model hierarchy

The framework uses a layered hierarchy of models, from single-neuron biophysics up to whole-brain mean-field equations and finally to ψ-coupled extensions:

Scale Model Variables Use
Single neuron (full biophysics) Hodgkin-Huxley V, m, h, n Action-potential generation, ion-channel dynamics
Single neuron (reduced) FitzHugh-Nagumo v, w Pedagogy; phase-plane intuition
Population (lumped) Wilson-Cowan E(t), I(t) Oscillations, multistability; foundation
Population (spatial) Amari u(x, t) Bumps, waves, working memory
Cortical column Jansen-Rit y0, y1, y2 EEG/MEG modelling
Whole-brain network Jansen-Rit + connectome y0,i, y1,i, y2,i TVB, DCM, large-scale dynamics
ψ-coupled brain WC + ψ u(x,t), ψ(x,t) Framework target

Each row is well-validated mainstream computational neuroscience; the bottom row is the framework's extension.

Common structure

All these models share a common functional skeleton:

 (Membrane / population time dynamics) = (Self-decay) + (Network input via sigmoid) + (External input)

The differences lie in:

  • How many compartments (single neuron vs population vs many populations).
  • Spatial structure (point vs field vs network).
  • Order of ODE (1st order for WC/Amari; 2nd order for Jansen-Rit).
  • Specific nonlinearity (sigmoid in all; Hill-function in some variants).

Cross-walks

  • Hodgkin-Huxley ↔ FitzHugh-Nagumo — fast/slow reduction; quasi-steady-state for m.
  • Many neurons ↔ Wilson-Cowan — mean-field limit; sigmoid for firing-rate distribution.
  • Wilson-Cowan ↔ Amari — discrete-to-continuum limit in space.
  • Wilson-Cowan ↔ Jansen-Rit — second-order form of EPSP / IPSP impulse response.
  • Jansen-Rit columns + connectome ↔ TVB / DCM — multi-column network.

Adding the ψ field

The framework adds two terms:

  1. Source coupling: neural firing produces a ψ source. Jψ(x,t) = κJ · f(u(x,t)).
  2. Feedback coupling: ψ modulates neural dynamics. + β · ψ(x,t) added to the synaptic-input drive.

ψ itself satisfies the relativistic field equation:

$ \Box \psi -m^{2}\psi -\lambda \psi ^{3}=\alpha \,F_{\mu \nu }F^{\mu \nu }+J_{\psi } $

So the full ψ-coupled Amari (or Wilson-Cowan or Jansen-Rit) system is:

$ \tau \,{\frac {\partial u(\mathbf {x} ,t)}{\partial t}}=-u+\!\int \!w(\mathbf {x} -\mathbf {x} ')\,f{\bigl (}u(\mathbf {x} ',t){\bigr )}\,d^{n}x'+h(\mathbf {x} ,t)+\beta \,\psi (\mathbf {x} ,t) $
$ J_{\psi }(\mathbf {x} ,t)=\kappa _{J}\,f{\bigl (}u(\mathbf {x} ,t){\bigr )} $
$ \Box \psi -m^{2}\psi -\lambda \psi ^{3}=\alpha \,F_{\mu \nu }F^{\mu \nu }+J_{\psi } $

Three coupling parameters:

Parameter Meaning Estimated magnitude
κJ Firing → ψ-source strength ~ 10−6 (natural units)
β ψ → firing-rate strength ~ 10−3 (small but detectable)
α EM → ψ vertex (universal) See Effective_Field_Theory_of_Consciousness

Properties of the loop

  1. β > 0 (positive feedback) → trance, kundalini, mystical-state regime. Self-sustaining oscillation: firing → ψ → more firing.
  2. β < 0 (negative feedback) → meditative quietude regime. ψ suppresses firing locally.
  3. ψ-resonance at ω* = √(m2 + k2) for plane-wave perturbations — practitioners frequency-lock to specific values.

These regime distinctions are the framework's mapping from neural-field dynamics to phenomenology of altered states. See Practice_to_Theory_Translation_Table.

Sanity checks

Limit Should recover Status
β = 0 Pure Wilson-Cowan / Amari; no ψ → brain coupling
κJ = 0 ψ decoupled from brain; just classical scalar field
α = 0 ψ doesn't couple to EM either; decoupled scalar
β = 0 AND κJ = 0 AND α = 0 Mainstream neuroscience + standard QFT; no psionics
Single neuron, no coupling HH or LIF biophysics
Slow-firing limit f(u) ≈ linear; system linearises
Sigmoid → step function Heaviside threshold; classical threshold dynamics

Experimental status

  • The baseline neural-field equations (HH, FN, WC, Amari, Jansen-Rit) are all mainstream, validated, undisputed.
  • The ψ-coupling terms (κJ, β) are framework extensions; their values are estimated from anomalous-cognition experiments and meditation neuroscience. They are testable via precision EEG/MEG under controlled ψ-source conditions.
  • The most direct test: does meditative coherence produce small but systematic correlations with anomalous-cognition signals beyond what classical neural-field dynamics predict?

See Also

References

  • Coombes, S., Beim Graben, P., Potthast, R., Wright, J. (eds.) (2014). Neural Fields: Theory and Applications. Springer.
  • Bressloff, P. C. (2012). "Spatiotemporal dynamics of continuum neural fields." Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and Theoretical 45: 033001.
  • Deco, G., Jirsa, V. K., Robinson, P. A., Breakspear, M., Friston, K. (2008). "The dynamic brain: From spiking neurons to neural masses and cortical fields." PLoS Computational Biology 4: e1000092.