Nonlinear activity of identified Lymnaea neurons.

Acta Biol Hung

Istituto di Biofisica del C.N.R., Pisa, Italy.

Published: February 2001

Two long-lasting discharges of action potentials were recorded from a buccal cell of the pond snail, respectively, before and after superfusing the preparation with low-calcium solution. The corresponding sequences of interspike intervals were then analysed by the nonlinear prediction methods. The results yield evidence of a small but clear nonlinearity only in the second of analysed tachograms. This finding is evaluated and discussed.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

nonlinear activity
4
activity identified
4
identified lymnaea
4
lymnaea neurons
4
neurons long-lasting
4
long-lasting discharges
4
discharges action
4
action potentials
4
potentials recorded
4
recorded buccal
4

Similar Publications

Hearing impairment (HI) disrupts social interaction by hindering the ability to follow conversations in noisy environments. While hearing aids (HAs) with noise reduction (NR) partially address this, the "cocktailparty problem" persists, where individuals struggle to attend to specific voices amidst background noise. This study investigated how NR and an advanced signal processing method for compensating for nonlinearities in EEG signals can improve neural speech processing in HI listeners.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Analog In-memory Computing (IMC) has demonstrated energy-efficient and low latency implementation of convolution and fully-connected layers in deep neural networks (DNN) by using physics for computing in parallel resistive memory arrays. However, recurrent neural networks (RNN) that are widely used for speech-recognition and natural language processing have tasted limited success with this approach. This can be attributed to the significant time and energy penalties incurred in implementing nonlinear activation functions that are abundant in such models.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cells use 'active' energy-consuming motor and filament protein networks to control micrometre-scale transport and fluid flows. Biological active materials could be used in dynamically programmable devices that achieve spatial and temporal resolution that exceeds current microfluidic technologies. However, reconstituted motor-microtubule systems generate chaotic flows and cannot be directly harnessed for engineering applications.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Transformation of Distinct Superatoms to Superalkalis by Successive Ligation of Thymine Nucleobases.

J Phys Chem A

January 2025

Fujian Key Laboratory of Drug Target Discovery and Structural and Functional Research, Higher Educational Key Laboratory for Nano Biomedical Technology of Fujian Province, The School of Pharmacy, Fujian Medical University, Fuzhou, Fujian 350108, People's Republic of China.

The ligation strategy has been widely used in the chemical synthesis of atomically precise clusters. A series of thymine (T)-ligated Al-T ( = Be, Al, C; = 1-5) complexes have been studied to reveal the effect of DNA nucleobase ligands on the electronic structures of different superatoms in the present work. In addition to its protective role, the successive attachment of thymine ligands significantly lowers the adiabatic ionization energies (AIEs) of the studied Al superatoms with filled and unfilled electronic shells.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Biological activities observed in living systems occur as the output of which nanometer-, submicrometer-, and micrometer-sized structures and tissues non-linearly and dynamically behave through chemical reaction networks, including the generation of various molecules and their assembly and disassembly. To understand the essence of the dynamic behavior in living systems, simpler artificial objects that exhibit cell-like non-linear phenomena have been recently constructed. However, most objects exhibiting cell-like dynamics have been found through trial-and-error experiments, and there are no strategies for designing them as molecular systems.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!