Publications by authors named "Gabriel Moreno Cunha"

The inquiry into the origin of brain complexity remains a pivotal question in neuroscience. While synaptic stimuli are acknowledged as significant, their efficacy often falls short in elucidating the extensive interconnections of the brain and nuanced levels of cognitive integration. Recent advances in neuroscience have brought the mechanisms underlying the generation of highly intricate dynamics, emergent patterns, and sophisticated oscillatory signals into question.

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The brain is understood as an intricate biological system composed of numerous elements. It is susceptible to various physical and chemical influences, including temperature. The literature extensively explores the conditions that influence synapses in the context of cellular communication.

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The brain is commonly understood as a complex network system with a particular organization and topology that can result in specific electrophysiological patterns. Among all the dynamic elements resulting from the circuits of the brain's network, ephapticity is a cellular communication mechanism that has received little attention. To understand the network's properties of ephaptic entrainment, we start investigating the ephaptic effect on a single neuron.

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In recent decades, there has been a growing interest in the impact of electric fields generated in the brain. Transmembrane ionic currents originate electric fields in the extracellular space and are capable of affecting nearby neurons, a phenomenon called ephaptic neuronal communication. In the present work, the Quadratic Integrated-and-Fire model (QIF-E) underwent an adjustment/improvement to include the ephaptic entrainment behavior between neurons and electric fields.

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