Mathematical Biology Seminar
Andre Longtin, University of Ottawa
Wednesday March 3, 2010
3:05pm in LCB 215
Title: Neural Coding in Electric Fish
Abstract:
Weakly electric fish are fascinating animals that have evolved an
electric sense that blends aspects of our senses of touch, vision and
audition. Much is known about the relatively simple (compared to
higher
mammals) circuitry of their brains, the kinds of stimuli they respond
to
and their social communications/interactions. They are particularly
well-suited to study principles of neural encoding and decoding
because
of the availability of electrophysiological recordings at many
successive processing stations, enabling mathematical modeling of
information transfer between stations. This talk will review past and
current research on this topic from the experimental-theoretical
collaboration of Len Maler, John Lewis and Andre Longtin at the
University of Ottawa. We will focus especially on the role of feedback
and how it interacts with stochastic spatio-temporal stimuli to induce
oscillatory neural activity.
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