Neural systems adapt to changes in stimulus statistics. However, it is not known how stimuli with complex temporal dynamics drive the dynamics of adaptation and the resulting firing rate. For single neurons, it has often been assumed that adaptation has a single time scale. Here, we show that single rat neocortical pyramidal neurons adapt with a time scale that depends on the time scale of changes in stimulus statistics. This multiple time scale adaptation is consistent with fractional order differentiation, such that the neuron’s firing rate is a fractional derivative of slowly varying stimulus parameters. Biophysically, even though neuronal fractional differentiation effectively yields adaptation with many time scales, we find that its im...
Most neurons in peripheral sensory pathways initially respond vigorously when a preferred stimulus i...
Recently, the use of a noisy input current to investigate single cell and network behavior in vitro ...
The ability to acquire and maintain appropriate representations of time-varying, sequential stimulus...
The voltage trace of neuronal activities can follow multiple timescale dynamics that arise from corr...
Neural dynamic processes correlated over several time scales are found in vivo, in stimulus-evoked a...
Abstract Complex networks have been programmed to mimic the input and output functions in multiple b...
In computational neuroscience, it is of crucial importance to dispose of a model that is able to acc...
Recent experimental work has suggested that the neural firing rate can be interpreted as a fractiona...
High variability in the neuronal response to stimulations and the adaptation phenomenon cannot be ex...
Spike-frequency adaptation (SFA) is widespread in the CNS, but its function remains unclear. In neoc...
Adaptation of neural responses due to the history of sensory input has been observed across all sens...
In the intact brain neurons are constantly exposed to intense synaptic activity. This heavy barrage ...
Neurons in all sensory systems have a remarkable ability to adapt their sensitivity to the statistic...
Nervous systems tune themselves to the statistical structure of the stimuli they encounter. This sen...
Neuronal adaptation is a common feature observed at various stages of sensory processing. Here, we q...
Most neurons in peripheral sensory pathways initially respond vigorously when a preferred stimulus i...
Recently, the use of a noisy input current to investigate single cell and network behavior in vitro ...
The ability to acquire and maintain appropriate representations of time-varying, sequential stimulus...
The voltage trace of neuronal activities can follow multiple timescale dynamics that arise from corr...
Neural dynamic processes correlated over several time scales are found in vivo, in stimulus-evoked a...
Abstract Complex networks have been programmed to mimic the input and output functions in multiple b...
In computational neuroscience, it is of crucial importance to dispose of a model that is able to acc...
Recent experimental work has suggested that the neural firing rate can be interpreted as a fractiona...
High variability in the neuronal response to stimulations and the adaptation phenomenon cannot be ex...
Spike-frequency adaptation (SFA) is widespread in the CNS, but its function remains unclear. In neoc...
Adaptation of neural responses due to the history of sensory input has been observed across all sens...
In the intact brain neurons are constantly exposed to intense synaptic activity. This heavy barrage ...
Neurons in all sensory systems have a remarkable ability to adapt their sensitivity to the statistic...
Nervous systems tune themselves to the statistical structure of the stimuli they encounter. This sen...
Neuronal adaptation is a common feature observed at various stages of sensory processing. Here, we q...
Most neurons in peripheral sensory pathways initially respond vigorously when a preferred stimulus i...
Recently, the use of a noisy input current to investigate single cell and network behavior in vitro ...
The ability to acquire and maintain appropriate representations of time-varying, sequential stimulus...