Table 2. Values for input settings.
Input set # (x) | Rows/columns/timesteps | Starting P/minimum P | Burst/refractory duration | AP/refractory multipliers |
1 | 4/4/300 | 0.5/0.5 | 10/20 | 3/0.2 |
2 | 4/4/300 | 0.5/0.5 | 10/20 | 2/0.2 |
3 | 4/4/300 | 0.5/0.5 | 10/20 | 1.5/0.2 |
4 | 5/5/300 | 0.5/0.5 | 8/26 | 1.5/0.2 |
5 | 5/5/300 | 0.5/0.5 | 8/26 | 2/0.2 |
6 | 5/5/300 | 0.5/0.5 | 8/26 | 4/0.2 |
7 | 5/5/300 | 0.5/0.5 | 8/26 | 8/0.2 |
8 | 5/5/300 | 0.5/0.5 | 10/12 | 3/0.2 |
9 | 1/1/300 | 1/0.6 | 10/20 | 3/0.2 |
10 | 1/1/300 | 1/0.55 | 10/20 | 3/0.2 |
11 | 1/2/300 | 0.5/0.5 | 10/14 | 3/0.1 |
12 | 1/2/300 | 1/0.5 | 10/14 | 3/0.1 |
13 | 1/2/300 | 0.5/0.5 | 10/10 | 3/0.1 |
14 | i/j/300 | 0.5/0.5 | 10/20 | 2/0.2 |
The format for reporting input values is:
x.S1yyy: weibullvar1/weibullvar2/weibullvar3; S2zzz: weibullvar4/weibullvar5/weibullvar6.
x is input set number; yyy and zzz refer to seed values between 000 and 999 (these are specific to Mathematica) and are used to generate the pseudorandom numbers. Pseudorandom numbers are used to select the specific values from the Weibull distributions that are assigned to each region.
Weibull distributions for anatomy sensitivity are generated from weibullvar1–3 and distributions for action potential threshold from weibullvar4–6.
Values in bold represent the changes made within the series.