Stuart Wilson on self-organization and cortical maps

How collaboration arrises and why it fails di Prof. Dr. Paul F.M.J. Verschure

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How does the brain build its own maps, and what constrains the patterns that evolution can produce? Computational neuroscientist Stuart Wilson argues that cortical arealization emerges from self-organizing processes operating within the design space defined by reaction-diffusion dynamics , not from a genetic blueprint that specifies each area independently. Subscribe for more from the Convergent Science Network podcast series. Stuart Wilson joins Paul Verschure and Tony Prescott to discuss how self-organization and natural selection interact to produce the diverse cortical maps observed across mammalian species. Drawing on Stuart Kauffman's framework and Alan Turing's reaction-diffusion mathematics, Wilson proposes that gene expression gradients across the developing cortex are themselves generated by self-organizing processes constrained by boun ... 

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brain developmentself-organizationcortical mapsStuart Wilsonreaction-diffusion