Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2077154 | Biosystems | 2007 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
We numerically study the subharmonic response of a heterogeneous pool of neurons to a pair of independent inputs. The neurons are stimulated with periodic pulse trains of frequencies f1=2 âHz and f2=3 âHz, and with inharmonic pulses whose frequencies f1 and f2 are equally shifted an amount Îf. When both inputs are subthreshold, we find that the neurons respond at a frequency equal to f2âf1 in the harmonic situation (Îf=0), that increases linearly with Îf in the inharmonic case. Thus the neurons detect a frequency not present in the input; this effect is termed “ghost resonance”. When one of the inputs is slightly suprathreshold the ghost resonance persists, but responses related with the frequency of the suprathreshold input also emerge. This behavior must be taken into account in experimental studies of signal integration and coincidence detection by neuronal pools.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Mathematics
Modelling and Simulation
Authors
Pablo Balenzuela, Jordi Garcia-Ojalvo, ElÃas Manjarrez, Lourdes MartÃnez, Claudio R. Mirasso,