Type I and Type II Neuron Models Are Selectively Driven by Differential Stimulus Features
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Publication:3527186
DOI10.1162/NECO.2008.10-07-632zbMath1143.92005DBLPjournals/neco/MatoS08arXiv0801.3963OpenAlexW2135164608WikidataQ47829796 ScholiaQ47829796MaRDI QIDQ3527186
Publication date: 25 September 2008
Published in: Neural Computation (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/0801.3963
Related Items (6)
Stimulus features, resetting curves, and the dependence on adaptation ⋮ Linking dynamical and functional properties of intrinsically bursting neurons ⋮ The Competing Benefits of Noise and Heterogeneity in Neural Coding ⋮ Effects of spike-triggered negative feedback on receptive-field properties ⋮ Spike-triggered covariance: geometric proof, symmetry properties, and extension beyond Gaussian stimuli ⋮ The dynamics of networks of identical theta neurons
Cites Work
- Parabolic Bursting in an Excitable System Coupled with a Slow Oscillation
- Asynchronous States and the Emergence of Synchrony in Large Networks of Interacting Excitatory and Inhibitory Neurons
- Computation in a Single Neuron: Hodgkin and Huxley Revisited
- What Causes a Neuron to Spike?
- On the Phase Reduction and Response Dynamics of Neural Oscillator Populations
- Single Neuron Computation: From Dynamical System to Feature Detector
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