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Spontaneous Secondary Spiking in Excitable Cells
Kepler & Marder (1993, Biol. Cybern.68, 209–214) proposed a model describing the electrical activity of a crab neuron in which a train of directly induced action potentials is sometimes followed by one or more spontaneous action potentials, referred to as spontaneous secondary spikes. We reduce...
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Published in: | Journal of theoretical biology 2000-07, Vol.205 (2), p.181-199 |
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Main Authors: | , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Kepler & Marder (1993, Biol. Cybern.68, 209–214) proposed a model describing the electrical activity of a crab neuron in which a train of directly induced action potentials is sometimes followed by one or more spontaneous action potentials, referred to as spontaneous secondary spikes. We reduce their five-dimensional model to three dimensions in two different ways in order to gain insight into the mechanism underlying the spontaneous spikes. We then treat a slowly varying current as a parameter in order to give a qualitative explanation of the phenomenon using phase-plane and bifurcation analysis. We demonstrate that a three-dimensional model, consisting of a two-dimensional excitable system plus a slow inward current, is sufficient to produce the behaviour observed in the original model. The exact dynamics of the excitable system are not important, but the relative time constant and amplitude of the slow inward current are crucial. Using the numerical bifurcation analysis package AUTO (Doedel & Kernevez, 1986, AUTO: Software for Continuation and Bifurcation Problems in Ordinary Differential Equations. California Institute of Technology), we compute bifurcation diagrams using the maximum amplitude of the slow inward current as the bifurcation parameter. The full and reduced models have a stable resting potential for all values of the bifurcation parameter. At a critical value of the bifurcation parameter, a stable tonic firing mode arises via a saddle-node of periodics bifurcation. Whether or not the models can exhibit transient or continuous spontaneous spiking depends on their position in parameter space relative to this saddle-node of periodics. |
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ISSN: | 0022-5193 1095-8541 |
DOI: | 10.1006/jtbi.2000.2056 |