The "local bend response" of the medicinal leech (Hirudo verbana) is a stimulus-response pathway that enables the animal to bend away from a pressure stimulus applied anywhere along its body. The neuronal circuitry that supports this behavior has been well described, and its responses to individual stimuli are understood in quantitative detail. We probed the local bend system with pairs of electrical stimuli to sensory neurons that could not logically be interpreted as a single touch to the body wall and used multiple suction electrodes to record simultaneously the responses in large numbers of motor neurons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMulti-channel acquisition from neuronal networks, either in vivo or in vitro, is becoming a standard in modern neuroscience in order to infer how cell assemblies communicate. In spite of the large diffusion of micro-electrode-array-based systems, researchers usually find it difficult to manage the huge quantity of data routinely recorded during the experimental sessions. In fact, many of the available open-source toolboxes still lack two fundamental requirements for treating multi-channel recordings: (i) a rich repertoire of algorithms for extracting information both at a single channel and at the whole network level; (ii) the capability of autonomously repeating the same set of computational operations to 'multiple' recording streams (also from different experiments) and without a manual intervention.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
September 2009
In this work we describe the interaction of the responses of neuronal networks to pairs of electrical stimuli. For this we use networks of dissociated cortical neurons cultured on planar microelectrode arrays. We compare the response to pairs of stimuli with the response to a stimulus in isolation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnnu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc
March 2008
Recent results indicate that cultures of cortical neurons exhibit large amounts of spontaneous modulation. It has even been suggested that results obtained earlier could be explained by spontaneous development, rather than to be due to the external manipulation. This stresses the importance of having detailed knowledge of how a culture responds to stimulation, in order to discern activity modulation from structural plasticity.
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