Shaping bursting by electrical coupling and noise
Georgi S. Medvedev, Svitlana Zhuravytska

TL;DR
This paper investigates how electrical coupling and noise influence synchronized bursting in neuron networks, revealing that network topology significantly affects denoising and synchronization stability.
Contribution
It provides quantitative estimates of denoising and synchronization stability in conductance-based models, highlighting the impact of network topology on these phenomena.
Findings
Electrical coupling reduces noise effects through denoising.
Networks with high algebraic connectivity enhance denoising.
Topology influences synchronization stability.
Abstract
Gap-junctional coupling is an important way of communication between neurons and other excitable cells. Strong electrical coupling synchronizes activity across cell ensembles. Surprisingly, in the presence of noise synchronous oscillations generated by an electrically coupled network may differ qualitatively from the oscillations produced by uncoupled individual cells forming the network. A prominent example of such behavior is the synchronized bursting in islets of Langerhans formed by pancreatic \beta-cells, which in isolation are known to exhibit irregular spiking. At the heart of this intriguing phenomenon lies denoising, a remarkable ability of electrical coupling to diminish the effects of noise acting on individual cells. In this paper, we derive quantitative estimates characterizing denoising in electrically coupled networks of conductance-based models of square wave bursting…
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