Reading Neuronal Synchrony with Depressing Synapses
Abstract
A recent experiment showed that neurons in the primary auditory cortex of the monkey do not change their mean firing rate during an ongoing tone stimulus. The only change was an enhanced correlation among the individual spike trains during the tone. We show that there is an easy way to extract this coherence information in the cortical cell population by projecting the spike trains through depressing synapses onto a postsynaptic neuron.
Cite
Text
Senn et al. "Reading Neuronal Synchrony with Depressing Synapses." Neural Computation, 1998. doi:10.1162/089976698300017494Markdown
[Senn et al. "Reading Neuronal Synchrony with Depressing Synapses." Neural Computation, 1998.](https://mlanthology.org/neco/1998/senn1998neco-reading/) doi:10.1162/089976698300017494BibTeX
@article{senn1998neco-reading,
title = {{Reading Neuronal Synchrony with Depressing Synapses}},
author = {Senn, Walter and Segev, Idan and Tsodyks, Misha},
journal = {Neural Computation},
year = {1998},
pages = {815-819},
doi = {10.1162/089976698300017494},
volume = {10},
url = {https://mlanthology.org/neco/1998/senn1998neco-reading/}
}