Synchronizing assemblies perform magnitude-invariant pattern detection
DOI10.1016/S0925-2312(02)00396-XzbMATH Open1007.68839OpenAlexW2091201419MaRDI QIDQ1851685FDOQ1851685
Authors: Rolf Henkel, Udo Ernst, Klaus Pawelzik
Publication date: 9 January 2003
Published in: Neurocomputing (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/s0925-2312(02)00396-x
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Information processingComputation with synchronizationMagnitude-invariant pattern detectionPulse-coupled neurons
Learning and adaptive systems in artificial intelligence (68T05) Computing methodologies and applications (68U99) Neural biology (92C20)
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- Distributed synchrony
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- Cortical spike synchrony as a measure of input familiarity
- Spatial eigenmodes and synchronous oscillation: Co-incidence detection in simulated cerebral cortex
- Approximate, not perfect synchrony maximizes the downstream effectiveness of excitatory neuronal ensembles
- Uncovering the synchronization dynamics from correlated neuronal activity quantifies assembly formation
- Neuronal networks with nonlinear couplings. Computing with synchrony
- Neuronal synchrony detection on single-electron neural networks
- Computational Properties of Networks of Synchronous Groups of Spiking Neurons
- Detecting Synchronous Cell Assemblies with Limited Data and Overlapping Assemblies
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