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How noise accidentally synchronizes separate groups of oscillators

Tae-Wook Ko

May 28, 2026

Groups of oscillators that never talk to each other synchronize their collective behavior when bathed in identical common noise. Using simulations and mathematical analysis, the authors show this happens even without coupling between groups, and they explain the mechanism through phase density evolution. The result suggests noise isn't just random disruption—it can coordinate activity across independent neural populations or other oscillatory systems.
Published as Common Noise-Induced Group-Level Synchronization Between Uncoupled Groups of Oscillators arXiv:2605.29529
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