Abstract
Neurotransmitter chemicals excite or inhibit a range of sensory afferents and sensory pathways. These changes in firing rate or static sensitivity can also be associated with changes in dynamic sensitivity or membrane noise and thus action potential timing. Wemeasured action potential firing produced by random mechanical stimulation of spider mechanoreceptor neurons during long-duration excitation by the GABAA agonist muscimol. Information capacity was estimated from signal-to-noise ratio by averaging responses to repeated identical stimulation sequences. Information capacity was also estimated from the coherence function between input and output signals. Entropy rate was estimated by a data compression algorithm and maximum entropy rate from the firing rate. Action potential timing variability, or jitter, was measured as normalized interspike interval distance. Muscimol increased firing rate, information capacity, and entropy rate, but jitter was unchanged. We compared these data with the effects of increasing firing rate by current injection. Our results indicate that the major increase in information capacity by neurotransmitter action arose from the increased entropy rate produced by increased firing rate, not from reduction in membrane noise and action potential jitter. Copyright © 2009 Society for Neuroscience.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Pfeiffer, K., & French, A. S. (2009). GABAergic excitation of spider mechanoreceptors increases information capacity by increasing entropy rather than decreasing jitter. Journal of Neuroscience, 29(35), 10989–10994. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2744-09.2009
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.