Biosystems 48:105-112, 1998

How the threshold of a neuron determines its capacity for coincidence detection.

R. Kempter, W. Gerstner, and J. L. van Hemmen

Coherent oscillatory activity of a population of neurons is thought to be a vital feature of temporal coding in the brain. We focus on the question of whether a single neuron can transform a spike code into a rate code. More precisely, how does a neuron vary its mean output firing rate, if its input changes from random to coherent? We investigate the coincidence detection properties of an integrate-and-fire neuron in dependence upon internal parameters and input statistics. In particular, we show how coincidence detection depends on the membrane time constant and the threshold. Furthermore, we demonstrate that there is an optimal threshold for coincidence detection and that there is a broad range of near-optimal threshold values. Fine-tuning is not necessary.


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