The Effects of Spike Frequency Adaptation and Negative Feedback on the Synchronization of Neural Oscillators
Author(s) -
Bard Ermentrout,
Matthew Pascal,
Boris Gutkin
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
neural computation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.235
H-Index - 169
eISSN - 1530-888X
pISSN - 0899-7667
DOI - 10.1162/08997660152002861
Subject(s) - afterhyperpolarization , synchronization (alternating current) , neuroscience , spike (software development) , adaptation (eye) , computer science , artificial neural network , biological system , mechanism (biology) , control theory (sociology) , physics , electrophysiology , artificial intelligence , psychology , biology , channel (broadcasting) , computer network , software engineering , quantum mechanics , control (management)
There are several different biophysical mechanisms for spike frequency adaptation observed in recordings from cortical neurons. The two most commonly used in modeling studies are a calcium-dependent potassium current I(ahp) and a slow voltage-dependent potassium current, I(m). We show that both of these have strong effects on the synchronization properties of excitatorily coupled neurons. Furthermore, we show that the reasons for these effects are different. We show through an analysis of some standard models, that the M-current adaptation alters the mechanism for repetitive firing, while the afterhyperpolarization adaptation works via shunting the incoming synapses. This latter mechanism applies with a network that has recurrent inhibition. The shunting behavior is captured in a simple two-variable reduced model that arises near certain types of bifurcations. A one-dimensional map is derived from the simplified model.
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