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Why Spikes

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SeminarPast EventNeuroscience

Why spikes?

Romaine Brette

Prof

Institut de la Vision

Schedule
Tuesday, May 30, 2023

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Tuesday, May 30, 2023

4:00 PM Europe/Berlin

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Abstract

On a fast timescale, neurons mostly interact by short, stereotypical electrical impulses or spikes. Why? A common answer is that spikes are useful for long-distance communication, to avoid alterations while traveling along axons. But as it turns out, spikes are seen in many places outside neurons: in the heart, in muscles, in plants and even in protists. From these examples, it appears that action potentials mediate some form of coordinated action, a timed event. From this perspective, spikes should not be seen simply as noisy implementations of underlying continuous signals (a sort of analog-to-digital conversion), but rather as events or actions. I will give a number of examples of functional spike-based interactions in living systems.

Topics

action potentialsanalog-to-digital conversioncoordinated actionelectrical impulseslong-distance communicationmuscleneuronsplasticityprotistsspikes

About the Speaker

Romaine Brette

Prof

Institut de la Vision

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

romainbrette.fr

@romainbrette

Follow on Twitter/X

twitter.com/romainbrette

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