Sensory Memory for Odors Is Encoded in Spontaneous Correlated Activity Between Olfactory Glomeruli
From MaRDI portal
Publication:3370033
DOI10.1162/089976606774841558zbMATH Open1080.92017DBLPjournals/neco/GalanWMHG06OpenAlexW2164652196WikidataQ51986277 ScholiaQ51986277MaRDI QIDQ3370033FDOQ3370033
Authors: Roberto F. Galán, Marcel Weidert, Randolf Menzel, C. Giovanni Galizia, Andreas Herz
Publication date: 6 February 2006
Published in: Neural Computation (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:352-opus-18500
Recommendations
- Odor-Driven Attractor Dynamics in the Antennal Lobe Allow for Simple and Rapid Olfactory Pattern Classification
- An olfactory recognition model based on spatio-temporal encoding of odor quality in the olfactory bulb
- Robust stimulus encoding in olfactory processing: hyperacuity and efficient signal transmission
- Olfactory encoding within the insect antennal lobe: the emergence and role of higher order temporal correlations in the dynamics of antennal lobe spiking activity
- Sensory experience modifies spontaneous state dynamics in a large-scale barrel cortical model
Cites Work
Cited In (4)
- Chemosensor-Driven Artificial Antennal Lobe Transient Dynamics Enable Fast Recognition and Working Memory
- Stimulus space complexity determines the ratio of specialist and generalist neurons during pattern recognition
- On spline regression under Gaussian subordination with long memory
- Chaotic itinerancy, temporal segmentation and spatio-temporal combinatorial codes
This page was built for publication: Sensory Memory for Odors Is Encoded in Spontaneous Correlated Activity Between Olfactory Glomeruli
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q3370033)