A novel canard-based mechanism for mixed-mode oscillations in a neuronal model
Abstract
We analyze a biophysical model of a neuron from the entorhinal cortex that includes persistent sodium and slow potassium as non-standard currents using reduction of dimension and dynamical systems techniques to determine the mechanisms for the generation of mixed-mode oscillations. We have found that the standard spiking currents (sodium and potassium) play a critical role in the analysis of the interspike interval. To study the mixed-mode oscillations, the six dimensional model has been reduced to a three dimensional model for the subthreshold regime. Additional transformations and a truncation have led to a simplified model system with three timescales that retains many properties of the original equations, and we employ this system to elucidate the underlying structure and explain a novel mechanism for the generation of mixed-mode oscillations based on the canard phenomenon. In particular, we prove the existence of a special solution, a singular primary canard, that serves as a transition between mixed-mode oscillations and spiking in the singular limit by employing appropriate rescalings, center manifold reductions, and energy arguments. Additionally, we conjecture that the singular canard solution is the limit of a family of canards and provide numerical evidence for the conjecture.
- Publication:
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arXiv e-prints
- Pub Date:
- April 2008
- DOI:
- 10.48550/arXiv.0804.0829
- arXiv:
- arXiv:0804.0829
- Bibcode:
- 2008arXiv0804.0829J
- Keywords:
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- Mathematics - Dynamical Systems;
- Physics - Biological Physics;
- Quantitative Biology - Neurons and Cognition;
- 37N25
- E-Print:
- 46 pages, 17 figures