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In Journal of Computational Neuroscience, Vol. 10, No. 1. (2001), pp. 25-45, doi:10.1023/a:1008916026143 Key: citeulike:11895157
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Although spike-frequency adaptation is a commonly observed property of neurons, its functional implications are still poorly understood. In this work, using a leaky integrate-and-fire neural model that includes a Ca2+-activated K+ current (I AHP), we develop a quantitative theory of adaptation temporal dynamics and compare our results with recent in vivo intracellular recordings from pyramidal cells in the cat visual cortex. Experimentally testable relations between the degree and the time constant of spike-frequency adaptation are predicted. We also contrast the I AHP model with an alternative adaptation model based on a dynamical firing threshold. Possible roles of adaptation in temporal computation are explored, as a a time-delayed neuronal self-inhibition mechanism. Our results include the following: (1) given the same firing rate, the variability of interspike intervals (ISIs) is either reduced or enhanced by adaptation, depending on whether the I AHP dynamics is fast or slow compared with the mean ISI in the output spike train; (2) when the inputs are Poisson-distributed (uncorrelated), adaptation generates temporal anticorrelation between ISIs, we suggest that measurement of this negative correlation provides a probe to assess the strength of I AHP in vivo; (3) the forward masking effect produced by the slow dynamics of I AHP is nonlinear and effective at selecting the strongest input among competing sources of input signals.
afterhyperpolarization current for LIF
mentions self-recurrent inhibition as possibly being similar
creates possibility for signal differentiation
negatively (?) effects temporal correlation -- >maybe reduces correlations that were already present in inputs?
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