Publications by authors named "Ajay Deep Kachhvah"

Article Synopsis
  • Sleep disturbances and drug-resistant seizures are major issues for those with idiopathic generalized epilepsy (IGE), and thalamic deep brain stimulation (DBS) could be a potential treatment.
  • A study combining wearable sleep monitoring and EEG showed that high-frequency stimulation (125 Hz) worsened sleep and increased seizures, while low-frequency stimulation (10 Hz) improved both sleep quality and seizure control.
  • The findings emphasize the importance of customizing DBS settings to individual patients' sleep needs to enhance treatment effectiveness and quality of life for those with refractory epilepsy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This Letter investigates the transition to synchronization of oscillator ensembles encoded by simplicial complexes in which pairwise and higher-order coupling weights alter with time through a rate-based adaptive mechanism inspired by the Hebbian learning rule. These simultaneously evolving disparate adaptive coupling weights lead to a phenomenon in that the in-phase synchronization is completely obliterated; instead, the antiphase synchronization is originated. In addition, the onsets of antiphase synchronization and desynchronization are manageable through both dyadic and triadic learning rates.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Inhibitory couplings are crucial for the normal functioning of many real-world complex systems. Inhibition in one layer has been shown to induce explosive synchronization in another excitatory (or positive) layer of duplex networks. By extending this framework to multiplex networks, this article shows that inhibition in a single layer can act as a catalyst, leading to explosive synchronization transitions in the rest of the layers feed-forwarded through intermediate layer(s).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This Letter investigates the nature of synchronization in multilayered and multiplexed populations in which the interlayer interactions are randomly pinned. First, we show that a multilayer network constructed by setting up all-to-all interlayer connections between the two populations leads to explosive synchronization in the two populations successively, leading to the coexistence of coherent and incoherent populations forming chimera states. Second, a multiplex formation of the two populations in which only the mirror nodes are interconnected espouses explosive transitions in the two populations concurrently.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Networks have been established as an extremely powerful framework to understand and predict the behavior of many large-scale complex systems. We studied network motifs, the basic structural elements of networks, to describe the possible role of co-occurrence of genomic variations behind high altitude adaptation in the Asian human population. Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) variations have been acclaimed as one of the key players in understanding the biological mechanisms behind adaptation to extreme conditions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To date, explosive synchronization (ES) in a network is shown to be originated from considering either degree-frequency correlation, frequency-coupling strength correlation, inertia, or adaptively controlled phase oscillators. Here we show that ES is a generic phenomenon and can occur in any network by multiplexing it with an appropriate layer without even considering any prerequisite for the emergence of ES. We devise a technique which leads to the occurrence of ES with hysteresis loop in a network upon its multiplexing with a negatively coupled (or inhibitory) layer.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We analyze an idealized model for the transmission or flow of particles, or discrete packets of information, in a weight bearing branching hierarchical two dimensional network and its variants. The capacities add hierarchically down the clusters. Each node can accommodate a limited number of packets, depending on its capacity, and the packets hop from node to node, following the links between the nodes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We investigate the statistics and dynamics of failure in a two-dimensional load-bearing network with branching hierarchical structure, and its variants. The variants strengthen the original lattice by using connectivity strategies which add new sites to the maximal cluster in top-to-bottom or bottom-to-top versions. We study the load-bearing capacity and the failure tolerance of all versions, as well as that of the strongest realization of the original lattice, the V lattice.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Synopsis of recent research by authors named "Ajay Deep Kachhvah"

  • - Ajay Deep Kachhvah's recent research includes interdisciplinary studies that explore complex systems' synchronization phenomena, focusing on both mathematical modeling and biological applications, particularly in multilayer networks and neurophysiology! - His work on the centromedian thalamic nucleus and drug-resistant epilepsy highlights the intersection of neuroscience and technology, using wearable devices and EEG monitoring to assess the effects of deep brain stimulation on sleep and seizure control! - Kachhvah has investigated the dynamics of explosive synchronization in various network structures, revealing how inhibitory mechanisms can catalyze synchronization across multiple layers, enriching the understanding of adaptive behaviors in complex adaptive systems!