Mathematical Biology Seminar
Erik Sherwood
Boston University
1:00PM, Friday, April 22, 2011
LCB 323
Phase Response and Isochron Structure of Bursting Neurons
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Abstract: |
Neurons that burst -- alternate regularly between periods of spiking
and quiescence -- are crucial for generating and organizing rhythmic
activity in the nervous system, for instance in motor activity and
sensory processing. The intrinsic phase response properties of
bursting neurons are critical for roles they play in patterning
neuronal network output. We investigate the phase response properties
of the Hindmarsh-Rose model of neuronal bursting using burst phase
response curves (BPRCs) computed with an infinitesimal perturbation
approximation and by direct simulation of synaptic input. The
resulting BPRCs have a significantly more complicated structure than
the usual Type I and Type II PRCs of spiking neuronal models, and they
exhibit highly timing-sensitive changes in the number of spikes per
burst that lead to large magnitude phase responses. We use fast-slow
dissection and isochron calculations to analyze the phase response
dynamics in both weak and strong perturbation regimes. Our findings
include the following: (1) The phase response during the active
segment of the burst displays considerable sensitivity (even for very
weak perturbations) closely associated with spike times in the
perturbed burster. (2) The isochron geometry of the fast subsystem
explains the shape and sensitivity of the recorded phase response
during the active bursting segment. (3) The onset of the homoclinic
bifurcation in the fast subsystem during the burst cycle strongly
affects the isochron geometry. (4) Strong perturbations may trigger
changes in spike number per burst, sometimes accompanied by early
burst initiation or termination, leading to large magnitude phase
responses that cannot be accounted for using the theory of weakly
coupled oscillators. |
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