- Synaptic noise
Synaptic noise describes the continuous and noisy "bombardment" of central
neurons bysynaptic inputs , especiallyin vivo . In particular, the cerebral cortex in vivo is characterized by sustained and irregular neuronal activity, which combined with the very high cortical interconnectivity, is responsible for a considerable and noisy synaptic activity in any given cortical neuron.Intracellular recordings of the membrane potential have characterized this intense activity, which sets neurons into a high-conductance state (because of the large number of synaptic inputs, each of which evokes a conductance increase in the membrane). Numerous computational models and theoretical studies have investigated high-conductance states and synaptic noise, and found numerous consequences on neuronal processing; the presence of synaptic noise may fundamentally change the integrative properties of neurons, and even may confer several computational advantages for information processing (see details in the articles [http://www.scholarpedia.org/article/High-conductance_state High-Conductance State] and [http://www.scholarpedia.org/article/Neuronal_noise Neuronal Noise] inScholarpedia ).External links
* [http://www.scholarpedia.org/article/High-conductance_state High-Conductance State] article in
Scholarpedia
* [http://www.scholarpedia.org/article/Neuronal_noise Neuronal Noise] article inScholarpedia
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