Mark J. Panaggio
Northwestern University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mark J. Panaggio.
Nonlinearity | 2015
Mark J. Panaggio; Daniel M. Abrams
A chimera state is a spatio-temporal pattern in a network of identical coupled oscillators in which synchronous and asynchronous oscillation coexist. This state of broken symmetry, which usually coexists with a stable spatially symmetric state, has intrigued the nonlinear dynamics community since its discovery in the early 2000s. Recent experiments have led to increasing interest in the origin and dynamics of these states. Here we review the history of research on chimera states and highlight major advances in understanding their behaviour.
Journal of the Royal Society Interface | 2012
Daniel M. Abrams; Mark J. Panaggio
An overwhelming majority of humans are right-handed. Numerous explanations for individual handedness have been proposed, but this population-level handedness remains puzzling. Here, we present a novel mathematical model and use it to test the idea that population-level hand preference represents a balance between selective costs and benefits arising from cooperation and competition in human evolutionary history. We use the selection of elite athletes as a test-bed for our evolutionary model and find evidence for the validity of this idea. Our model gives the first quantitative explanation for the distribution of handedness both across and within many professional sports. It also predicts strong lateralization of hand use in social species with limited combative interaction, and elucidates the absence of consistent population-level ‘pawedness’ in some animal species.
Chaos | 2016
Erik Andreas Martens; Christian Bick; Mark J. Panaggio
The simplest network of coupled phase-oscillators exhibiting chimera states is given by two populations with disparate intra- and inter-population coupling strengths. We explore the effects of heterogeneous coupling phase-lags between the two populations. Such heterogeneity arises naturally in various settings, for example, as an approximation to transmission delays, excitatory-inhibitory interactions, or as amplitude and phase responses of oscillators with electrical or mechanical coupling. We find that breaking the phase-lag symmetry results in a variety of states with uniform and non-uniform synchronization, including in-phase and anti-phase synchrony, full incoherence (splay state), chimera states with phase separation of 0 or π between populations, and states where both populations remain desynchronized. These desynchronized states exhibit stable, oscillatory, and even chaotic dynamics. Moreover, we identify the bifurcations through which chimeras emerge. Stable chimera states and desynchronized solutions, which do not arise for homogeneous phase-lag parameters, emerge as a result of competition between synchronized in-phase, anti-phase equilibria, and fully incoherent states when the phase-lags are near ±π2 (cosine coupling). These findings elucidate previous experimental results involving a network of mechanical oscillators and provide further insight into the breakdown of synchrony in biological systems.
Chaos | 2018
Christian Bick; Mark J. Panaggio; Erik Andreas Martens
Kuramoto oscillators are widely used to explain collective phenomena in networks of coupled oscillatory units. We show that simple networks of two populations with a generic coupling scheme, where both coupling strengths and phase lags between and within populations are distinct, can exhibit chaotic dynamics as conjectured by Ott and Antonsen [Chaos 18, 037113 (2008)]. These chaotic mean-field dynamics arise universally across network size, from the continuum limit of infinitely many oscillators down to very small networks with just two oscillators per population. Hence, complicated dynamics are expected even in the simplest description of oscillator networks.
Physical Review Letters | 2013
Mark J. Panaggio; Daniel M. Abrams
Physical Review E | 2015
Mark J. Panaggio; Daniel M. Abrams
New Journal of Physics | 2016
Erik Andreas Martens; Mark J. Panaggio; Daniel M. Abrams
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015
Daniel M. Abrams; Mark J. Panaggio
Archive | 2014
Ibrahim Diakite; David A. Edwards; Brooks Emerick; Christopher S. Raymond; Matt Zumbrum; Mark J. Panaggio; Angela Peace
Physical Review E | 2013
Mark J. Panaggio; Bertrand Ottino-Löffler; Peiguang Hu; Daniel M. Abrams