A simple neuronal model is assumed in which, after a refractory period, excitatory and inhibitory exponentially decaying inputs of constant size occur at random intervals and sum until a threshold is reached. The distribution of time intervals between successive neuronal firings (interresponse time histogram), the firing rate as a function of input frequency, the variability in the time course of depolarization from trial to trial, and the strength-duration curve are derived for this model. The predictions are compared with data from the literature and good qualitative agreement is found. All parameters are experimentally measurable and a direct test of the theory is possible with present techniques. The assumptions of the model are relaxed...
In connection with model of the neuron presented by CAIANIELLO (1961), an approach to the study of a...
High variability in the neuronal response to stimulations and the adaptation phenomenon cannot be ex...
The interspike intervals in steady-state neuron firing are assumed to be independently and identical...
The pattern of nerve action potentials produced by unit permeability changes (quantal inputs) occurr...
Abstract. The interspike intervals in steady-state neuron firing are assumed to be indepen-dently an...
A formalized neuron receiving unitary excitatory impulses at random is considered. Each impulse prov...
In recent experiments, synaptically isolated neurons from rat cortical culture, were stimulated with...
the nature and origin of neural variability at the level of single neurons and neural networks is fu...
AbstractThe spike trains that transmit information between neurons are stochastic. We used the theor...
A recurrent model of the repetitive firing of neurons responding to stimuli of long duration is give...
<div><p>The response of a neuron to a time-dependent stimulus, as measured in a Peri-Stimulus-Time-H...
<p>A. The relationship between phase trajectories, phase distribution at the mean spike time, and th...
Stein's model for a neuron receiving randomly arriving post-synaptic potentials is studied from...
High variability in the neuronal response to stimulations and the adaptation phenomenon cannot be ex...
In connection with model of the neuron presented by CAIANIELLO (1961), an approach to the study of a...
In connection with model of the neuron presented by CAIANIELLO (1961), an approach to the study of a...
High variability in the neuronal response to stimulations and the adaptation phenomenon cannot be ex...
The interspike intervals in steady-state neuron firing are assumed to be independently and identical...
The pattern of nerve action potentials produced by unit permeability changes (quantal inputs) occurr...
Abstract. The interspike intervals in steady-state neuron firing are assumed to be indepen-dently an...
A formalized neuron receiving unitary excitatory impulses at random is considered. Each impulse prov...
In recent experiments, synaptically isolated neurons from rat cortical culture, were stimulated with...
the nature and origin of neural variability at the level of single neurons and neural networks is fu...
AbstractThe spike trains that transmit information between neurons are stochastic. We used the theor...
A recurrent model of the repetitive firing of neurons responding to stimuli of long duration is give...
<div><p>The response of a neuron to a time-dependent stimulus, as measured in a Peri-Stimulus-Time-H...
<p>A. The relationship between phase trajectories, phase distribution at the mean spike time, and th...
Stein's model for a neuron receiving randomly arriving post-synaptic potentials is studied from...
High variability in the neuronal response to stimulations and the adaptation phenomenon cannot be ex...
In connection with model of the neuron presented by CAIANIELLO (1961), an approach to the study of a...
In connection with model of the neuron presented by CAIANIELLO (1961), an approach to the study of a...
High variability in the neuronal response to stimulations and the adaptation phenomenon cannot be ex...
The interspike intervals in steady-state neuron firing are assumed to be independently and identical...