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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2010 Aug 18.
Published in final edited form as: J Neurosci. 2009 May 20;29(20):6514–6525. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0492-08.2009

Figure 6.

Figure 6

The spacing of ocular dominance columns is determined also by the initial condition: The evolution of synaptic weights with the learning rule of Eq. 7 started from intermediate (4 cycles; A) or high spatial frequency (6 cycles; B) initial synaptic strengths. The evolution of synapses carrying information from the contralateral (Top) and ipsilateral (Bottom) eye, shown as color, vs. time (horizontal) and position (vertical). (C) The final spatial frequency (in cycles) of the ocular dominance columns as a function of the spatial frequency of the initial condition and the strength of the intracortical connections, MA. The peak of the power spectrum of the function M, which describes intracortical connections, peaked at about 4 cycles. The spatial frequency of the final OD column was close to the spatial frequency of the initial weight pattern when MA was not too large and when the spatial frequency of the initial weight pattern was close to the spectrum peak of M; otherwise the frequency of the final OD columns was set by the spectrum peak of M. (For better spatial resolution, N = 400 neurons were simulated instead of N = 100 in this panel.) The cortex did not equalize (the mean synaptic strength from one eye exceeded 50 ± 10% range of the total) within the simulation time when MA was too small (shown in white color). The cortex equalized before the maturation of inhibition when MA was too big (shown in black).