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Article: Properties of somatosensory synaptic integration in cerebellar granule cells in vivo.

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Jörntell H; Ekerot CF
J. Neurosci., 2006


Table 3.

Evoked activity in granule cells with specific input (mean ± SD)

EC spike (Hz) IC spike (Hz) Int. syn. response
Cutaneous, hair, receptive field 910 ± 120 (n = 10) 920 ± 95 (n = 4)
Cutaneous, non-hair, receptive field 620 ± 210 (n = 5) 550 (n = 2)
Cutaneous, outside receptive field
    Adjacent site 1 0 (n = 5) 0 (n = 5)
    Adjacent site 2 0 (n = 5) 0 (n = 5)
Strongly/moderate joint movement input 130 ± 90 (n = 6) 210 ± 80 (n = 3) 340 ± 190% (n = 4)
Weakly activated with long response latency times 44 ± 19 (n = 4) 48 ± 17 (n = 3) 230 ± 50% (n = 3)
  • Firing activity recorded at 0 pA, spontaneous EPSP activity recorded at approximately −70 mV. ′0 Hz′ indicates that the cells had a spontaneous rate of <0.4 Hz. All spike frequencies were calculated as the number of spikes divided by the time window within which they occurred. The start point of the time window was defined as halfway between the first included spike and the nearest preceding spike. The end point of the time window was defined as the time point halfway between the last included spike and the nearest subsequent spike. Spike frequencies in evoked responses were calculated on at least three consecutive spikes (typically 5–15), whereas spontaneous activity represent averages over ≥30 s. The rectified, integrated synaptic responses (Int. syn. response) were calculated as described in Fig. 4.


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Inferred neuron-electrophysiology data values

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