Do neurons have a voltage or a current threshold for action potential initiation?
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Publication:1893785
DOI10.1007/BF00962708zbMath0820.92004DBLPjournals/jcns/KochBD95WikidataQ51650922 ScholiaQ51650922MaRDI QIDQ1893785
Rodney J. Douglas, Christof Koch, Öjvind Bernander
Publication date: 1 August 1995
Published in: Journal of Computational Neuroscience (Search for Journal in Brave)
membrane potentialdendritic treevisual cortexintegrate-and-fire modelsaction potential initiationcurrent thresholdlayer 5 pyramidal celloutput representationsingle cell modelssomatic action potentialsvoltage threshold
Related Items (7)
Characterization of Subthreshold Voltage Fluctuations in Neuronal Membranes ⋮ Subtractive and Divisive Inhibition: Effect of Voltage-Dependent Inhibitory Conductances and Noise ⋮ Two-State Membrane Potential Fluctuations Driven by Weak Pairwise Correlations ⋮ Neuronal model with distributed delay: analysis and simulation study for gamma distribution memory kernel ⋮ Categorization of Neural Excitability Using Threshold Models ⋮ Correlation Between Uncoupled Conductance-Based Integrate-and-Fire Neurons Due to Common and Synchronous Presynaptic Firing ⋮ Predicting spike timing of neocortical pyramidal neurons by simple threshold models
Cites Work
- ``Neural computation of decisions in optimization problems
- Network Amplification of Local Fluctuations Causes High Spike Rate Variability, Fractal Firing Patterns and Oscillatory Local Field Potentials
- Realistic synaptic inputs for model neural networks
- Neurons with graded response have collective computational properties like those of two-state neurons.
- A logical calculus of the ideas immanent in nervous activity
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