The role of gain neuromodulation in layer-5 pyramidal neurons
Alejandro Rodriguez-Garcia, Christopher J. Whyte, Brandon R. Munn, Jie Mei, James M. Shine, Srikanth Ramaswamy

TL;DR
This paper explores how neuromodulators influence gain in layer-5 pyramidal neurons, revealing mechanisms that enable flexible cortical activity and rapid synaptic reconfiguration through a computational model.
Contribution
It introduces a two-compartment Izhikevich model capturing gain modulation by neuromodulators in cortical neurons, linking dendritic activity, inhibition, and plasticity.
Findings
Dendritic drive and coupling increase neuronal gain.
Dendritic and somatic inhibition modulate gain and firing thresholds.
Bursting accelerates synaptic plasticity and network flexibility.
Abstract
Biological and artificial learning systems alike confront the plasticity-stability dilemma. In the brain, neuromodulators such as acetylcholine and noradrenaline relieve this tension by tuning neuronal gain and inhibitory gating, balancing segregation and integration of circuits. Fed by dense cholinergic and noradrenergic projections from the ascending arousal system, layer-5 pyramidal neurons in the cerebral cortex offer a relevant substrate for understanding these dynamics. When distal dendritic signals coincide with back-propagating action potentials, calcium plateaus turn a single somatic spike into a high-gain burst, and interneuron inhibition sculpts the output. These properties make layer-5 cells gain-tunable amplifiers that translate neuromodulatory cues into flexible cortical activity. To capture this mechanism we developed a two-compartment Izhikevich model for pyramidal…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
