Gain Modulation as a Mechanism for Switching Reference Frames, Tasks, and Targets

  • Salinas E
  • Bentley N
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Abstract

Recent experimental research advances have led to increasingly detailed descriptions of how networks of interacting neurons process information. With these developments, it has become clear that dynamic network behaviors underlie information processing, and that the observed activity patterns cannot be fully explained by simple concepts such as synchrony and phase locking. These new insights raise significant challenges and offer exciting opportunities for experimental and theoretical neuroscientists. Coherent Behavior in Neuronal Networks features a review of recent research in this area from some of the world’s foremost experts on systems neuroscience. The book presents novel methodologies and interdisciplinary perspectives, and will serve as an invaluable resource to the research community. Highlights include the results of interdisciplinary collaborations and approaches as well as topics, such as the interplay of intrinsic and synaptic dynamics in producing coherent neuronal network activity and the roles of globally coherent rhythms and oscillations in the coordination of distributed processing, that are of significant research interest but have been underrepresented in the review literature. With its cutting-edge mathematical, statistical, and computational techniques, this volume will be of interest to all researchers and students in the field of systems neuroscience.

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Salinas, E., & Bentley, N. M. (2009). Gain Modulation as a Mechanism for Switching Reference Frames, Tasks, and Targets. In Coherent Behavior in Neuronal Networks (pp. 121–142). Springer New York. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-0389-1_7

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