The mutual information between stimulus and spike-train response is commonly used to monitor neural coding efficiency, but neuronal computation broadly conceived requires more refined and targeted information measures of input-output joint processes. A first step towards that larger goal is to develop information measures for individual output processes, including information generation (entropy rate), stored information (statistical complexity), predictable information (excess entropy), and active information accumulation (bound information rate). We calculate these for spike trains generated by a variety of noise-driven integrate-and-fire neurons as a function of time resoluti...
Objective: While understanding the interaction patterns among simultaneous recordings of spike train...
The encoding and processing of time-dependent signals into sequences of action potentials of sensory...
"The spiking activity of neuronal networks follows laws that are not time-reversal symmetric; the no...
The mutual information between stimulus and spike-train response is commonly used to monito...
The mutual information between stimulus and spike-train response is commonly used to monitor neural ...
The mutual information between stimulus and spike-train response is commonly used to monitor neural ...
The mutual information between stimulus and spike-train response is commonly used to monitor neural ...
The mutual information between stimulus and spike-train response is commonly used to monitor neural ...
Neurons communicate via the relative timing of all-or-none biophysical signals called spikes. For st...
While it is generally agreed that neurons transmit information about their synaptic inputs through s...
Sensory stimuli are received by sensory neurons and information about these stimuli is further trans...
Quantification of information content and its temporal variation in intracellular calcium spike trai...
The information communicated by stereotypical action potentials is thought to be embedded in the tim...
The information communicated by stereotypical action potentials is thought to be embedded in the tim...
We demonstrate that the information contained in the spike occurrence times of a population of neuro...
Objective: While understanding the interaction patterns among simultaneous recordings of spike train...
The encoding and processing of time-dependent signals into sequences of action potentials of sensory...
"The spiking activity of neuronal networks follows laws that are not time-reversal symmetric; the no...
The mutual information between stimulus and spike-train response is commonly used to monito...
The mutual information between stimulus and spike-train response is commonly used to monitor neural ...
The mutual information between stimulus and spike-train response is commonly used to monitor neural ...
The mutual information between stimulus and spike-train response is commonly used to monitor neural ...
The mutual information between stimulus and spike-train response is commonly used to monitor neural ...
Neurons communicate via the relative timing of all-or-none biophysical signals called spikes. For st...
While it is generally agreed that neurons transmit information about their synaptic inputs through s...
Sensory stimuli are received by sensory neurons and information about these stimuli is further trans...
Quantification of information content and its temporal variation in intracellular calcium spike trai...
The information communicated by stereotypical action potentials is thought to be embedded in the tim...
The information communicated by stereotypical action potentials is thought to be embedded in the tim...
We demonstrate that the information contained in the spike occurrence times of a population of neuro...
Objective: While understanding the interaction patterns among simultaneous recordings of spike train...
The encoding and processing of time-dependent signals into sequences of action potentials of sensory...
"The spiking activity of neuronal networks follows laws that are not time-reversal symmetric; the no...