Neuronal coupling by endogenous electric fields: Cable theory and applications to coincidence detector neurons in the auditory brainstem
Joshua H. Goldwyn, John Rinzel

TL;DR
This paper develops a cable theory framework to analyze how extracellular electric fields generated by neural populations influence nearby neurons, with a focus on their role in auditory coincidence detection in the brainstem.
Contribution
It introduces a biophysical model demonstrating that endogenous electric fields can modulate neural activity and timing in the auditory brainstem, highlighting a potential role for ephaptic interactions.
Findings
Neural populations can generate millivolt-scale extracellular fields.
Ephaptic interactions can alter spike timing and thresholds.
These effects may influence auditory processing in the MSO.
Abstract
The ongoing activity of neurons generates a spatially- and time-varying field of extracellular voltage (). This field reflects population-level neural activity, but does it modulate neural dynamics and the function of neural circuits? We provide a cable theory framework to study how a bundle of model neurons generates and how this feeds back and influences membrane potential (). We find that these "ephaptic interactions" are small but not negligible. The model neural population can generate with millivolt-scale amplitude and this perturbs the of "nearby" cables and effectively increases their electrotonic length. After using passive cable theory to systematically study ephaptic coupling, we explore a test case: the medial superior olive (MSO) in the auditory brainstem. The MSO is a possible locus of ephaptic interactions: sounds evoke large…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeural dynamics and brain function · Plant and Biological Electrophysiology Studies · Neuroscience and Neural Engineering
