Mean Instantaneous Firing Frequency Is Always Higher Than the Firing Rate
From MaRDI portal
Publication:4823750
DOI10.1162/089976604772744875zbMath1111.68617OpenAlexW2152661514WikidataQ79779276 ScholiaQ79779276MaRDI QIDQ4823750
Roger Rodriguez, Petr Lansky, Laura Sacerdote
Publication date: 28 October 2004
Published in: Neural Computation (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1162/089976604772744875
Related Items (11)
On the classification of experimental data modeled via a stochastic leaky integrate and fire model through boundary values ⋮ Similarity of interspike interval distributions and information gain in a stationary neuronal firing ⋮ A new firing paradigm for integrate and fire stochastic neuronal models ⋮ Optimum signal in a diffusion leaky integrate-and-fire neuronal model ⋮ On Firing Rate Estimation for Dependent Interspike Intervals ⋮ An introductory review of information theory in the context of computational neuroscience ⋮ Optimal Signal Estimation in Neuronal Models ⋮ Optimum signal in a simple neuronal model with signal-dependent noise ⋮ How Sample Paths of Leaky Integrate-and-Fire Models Are Influenced by the Presence of a Firing Threshold ⋮ Firing Variability Is Higher than Deduced from the Empirical Coefficient of Variation ⋮ Coordinate invariance as a fundamental constraint on the form of stimulus-specific information measures
Cites Work
- The Ornstein-Uhlenbeck process as a model for neuronal activity. I. Mean and variance of the firing time
- Diffusion approximation of the neuronal model with synaptic reversal potentials
- Continuous functions determined by spike trains of a neuron subject to stimulation
- Universality in neural networks: The importance of the mean firing rate
- On the comparison of Feller and Ornstein-Uhlenbeck models for neural activity
- Rate Coding Versus Temporal Order Coding: What the Retinal Ganglion Cells Tell the Visual Cortex
- Determination of Response Latency and Its Application to Normalization of Cross-Correlation Measures
- Dynamics of the Firing Probability of Noisy Integrate-and-Fire Neurons
- On the First Passage Time Probability Problem
- The Ornstein-Uhlenbeck neuronal model with signal-dependent noise
This page was built for publication: Mean Instantaneous Firing Frequency Is Always Higher Than the Firing Rate