Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2501174758> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W2501174758 endingPage "238" @default.
- W2501174758 startingPage "215" @default.
- W2501174758 abstract "The acoustic communication of grasshoppers, crickets, and katydids provides prime examples of general principles of how nervous systems represent sensory information. The processing of auditory signals in insects is innate; thus the involved neuronal modules are “hardwired.” In addition, the relevant stimulus space is restricted, facilitating the investigation. A major problem of sensory processing is the trial-to-trial variability of spike trains caused by the stochastic opening and closing of ion channels. In animals that can spend only a few neurons for a given task, this unreliability of spike trains is a relevant constraint for neuronal encoding. Signal recognition in insects depends primarily on features of the sound envelope, the pattern of amplitude modulations. The receptor neurons respond with high temporal precision and reflect the stimulus’s envelope in their spike patterns. This kind of “temporal code” is later transformed to a “labeled line code” representation in which single neurons encode specific sound features. Similarly to the larger nervous systems of vertebrates, at this stage, spike rates are reduced and the presence of particular sound features can be read out from a population code. Remarkably, in insects, the sparsening and change of coding schemes occur already within a few synapses after the receptors. Modeling studies suggest how feature detectors equipped with linear filters may explain behavioral scores found with specific stimulus variations. Remarkably, in grasshoppers and crickets, the filters found by this approach resembled Gabor filters, which allow an easy transition between behavioral preference functions found in different species." @default.
- W2501174758 created "2016-08-23" @default.
- W2501174758 creator A5044972383 @default.
- W2501174758 date "2016-01-01" @default.
- W2501174758 modified "2023-09-27" @default.
- W2501174758 title "Information Processing in the Auditory Pathway of Insects" @default.
- W2501174758 cites W1192153153 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W123214947 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W1553999749 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W1792460620 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W1964237489 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W1965459566 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W1968036442 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W1968723104 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W1968751331 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W1972168487 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W1972517164 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W1973263050 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W1973422345 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W1979862585 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W1981587598 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W1981907978 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W1983008279 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W1987202624 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W1987566914 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W1992244082 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2006461157 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2006500012 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2007970420 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W20144533 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2022112735 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2022662525 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2025425321 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2026144464 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2026724273 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2027783375 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2028645278 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2034801192 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2040317734 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2043866620 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2044703307 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2044840257 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2044874270 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2047308353 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2049634491 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2053675069 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2059184558 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2060996677 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2061290291 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2063403771 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2067342931 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2069011067 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2069530461 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2072340562 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2076104971 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2082819114 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2086637789 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2092042964 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2093560030 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2108145762 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2118677546 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2119180137 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2121012038 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2121441353 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2121988787 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2131513564 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2135928947 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2136985327 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2137234026 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2145889472 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2151299179 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2154842002 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2158533076 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2161365760 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2162653040 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2168056146 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2169625514 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2172524722 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2192241575 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2259228933 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W2494237288 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W3193501227 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W4210453397 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W4234414761 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W69707520 @default.
- W2501174758 cites W883349384 @default.
- W2501174758 doi "https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-28890-1_9" @default.
- W2501174758 hasPublicationYear "2016" @default.
- W2501174758 type Work @default.
- W2501174758 sameAs 2501174758 @default.
- W2501174758 citedByCount "2" @default.
- W2501174758 countsByYear W25011747582017 @default.
- W2501174758 countsByYear W25011747582019 @default.
- W2501174758 crossrefType "book-chapter" @default.
- W2501174758 hasAuthorship W2501174758A5044972383 @default.
- W2501174758 hasConcept C104317684 @default.
- W2501174758 hasConcept C115903868 @default.
- W2501174758 hasConcept C144024400 @default.