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  2. Excitable medium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Excitable_medium

    A forest is an example of an excitable medium: if a wildfire burns through the forest, no fire can return to a burnt spot until the vegetation has gone through its refractory period and regrown. In chemistry, oscillating reactions are excitable media, for example the Belousov–Zhabotinsky reaction and the Briggs–Rauscher reaction.

  3. Excitable - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Excitable

    Excitable may refer to: a song on the 1987 Def Leppard album Hysteria; a hit song by the British band Amazulu; a cell that can respond to stimuli; See also.

  4. Membrane potential - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Membrane_potential

    In non-excitable cells, and in excitable cells in their baseline states, the membrane potential is held at a relatively stable value, called the resting potential. For neurons, resting potential is defined as ranging from –80 to –70 millivolts; that is, the interior of a cell has a negative baseline voltage of a bit less than one-tenth of a ...

  5. Threshold potential - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Threshold_potential

    Through use of voltage clamp techniques on a squid giant axon, they discovered that excitable tissues generally exhibit the phenomenon that a certain membrane potential must be reached in order to fire an action potential. Since the experiment yielded results through the observation of ionic conductance changes, Hodgkin and Huxley used these ...

  6. Action potential - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Action_potential

    However, the main excitable cell is the neuron, which also has the simplest mechanism for the action potential. [citation needed] Neurons are electrically excitable cells composed, in general, of one or more dendrites, a single soma, a single axon and one or more axon terminals. Dendrites are cellular projections whose primary function is to ...

  7. Refractory period (physiology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Refractory_period_(physiology)

    In other words, because the membrane potential inside the axon becomes increasingly negative relative to the outside of the membrane, a stronger stimulus will be required to reach the threshold voltage, and thus, initiate another action potential. This period is the relative refractory period.

  8. Rheobase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rheobase

    Fig. 1 – Rheobase and chronaxie are points defined on the strength-duration curve for stimulus of an excitable tissue. Rheobase is a measure of membrane potential excitability . In neuroscience , rheobase is the minimal current amplitude of infinite duration that results in the depolarization threshold of the cell membranes being reached ...

  9. Chronaxie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chronaxie

    Chronaxie is the tissue-excitability parameter that permits choice of the optimum stimulus pulse duration for stimulation of any excitable tissue. Chronaxie (c) is the Lapicque descriptor of the stimulus pulse duration for a current of twice rheobasic (b) strength, which is the threshold current for an infinitely long-duration stimulus pulse.