enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Action potential - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Action_potential

    The currents flowing inwards at a point on the axon during an action potential spread out along the axon, and depolarize the adjacent sections of its membrane. If sufficiently strong, this depolarization provokes a similar action potential at the neighboring membrane patches. This basic mechanism was demonstrated by Alan Lloyd Hodgkin in 1937 ...

  3. Soliton model in neuroscience - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soliton_model_in_neuroscience

    An action potential initiated anywhere on an axon will travel in an antidromic (backward) direction to the neuron soma (cell body) without loss of amplitude and produce a full-amplitude action potential in the soma. As the membrane area of the soma is orders of magnitude larger than the area of the axon, conservation of energy requires that an ...

  4. Dendritic spike - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dendritic_spike

    Figure B. is a recording of an actual action potential N.B. Actual recordings of action potentials are often distorted compared to the schematic view because of variations in electrophysiological techniques used to make the recording. In neurophysiology, a dendritic spike refers to an action potential generated in the dendrite of a neuron ...

  5. Biological neuron model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biological_neuron_model

    Stochastic spike generation (noisy output) depends on the momentary difference between the membrane potential V(t) and the threshold. The membrane potential V of the spike response model (SRM) has two contributions. [51] [52] First, input current I is filtered by a first filter k. Second the sequence of output spikes S(t) is filtered by a ...

  6. Neural backpropagation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neural_backpropagation

    An action potential occurs in the axon first as research illustrates that sodium channels at the dendrites exhibit a higher threshold than those on the membrane of the axon (Rapp et al., 1996). Moreover, the voltage-gated sodium channels on the dendritic membranes having a higher threshold helps prevent them triggering an action potential from ...

  7. Axolemma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Axolemma

    However, repolarization overshoots the resting membrane potential, because the K + channels experience a delay when closing, which causes a period of hyperpolarization. [4] This change in charge, voltage, and membrane potential generates an electrical signal referred to as an action potential. Action potentials are used for communication ...

  8. Chemical synapse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_synapse

    The arriving action potential produces an influx of calcium ions through voltage-dependent, calcium-selective ion channels at the down stroke of the action potential (tail current). [15] Calcium ions then bind to synaptotagmin proteins found within the membranes of the synaptic vesicles, allowing the vesicles to fuse with the presynaptic ...

  9. Threshold potential - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Threshold_potential

    In electrophysiology, the threshold potential is the critical level to which a membrane potential must be depolarized to initiate an action potential. In neuroscience , threshold potentials are necessary to regulate and propagate signaling in both the central nervous system (CNS) and the peripheral nervous system (PNS).