Abstract
We study how the location of synaptic input influences the stablex firing states in coupled model neurons bursting rhythmically at the gamma frequencies (20–70 Hz). The model neuron consists of two compartments and generates one, two, three or four spikes in each burst depending on the intensity of input current and the maximum conductance of M-type potassium current. If the somata are connected by reciprocal excitatory synapses, we find strong correlations between the changes in the bursting mode and those in the stable phase-locked states of the coupled neurons. The stability of the in-phase phase-locked state (synchronously firing state) tends to change when the individual neurons change their bursting patterns. If, however, the synaptic connections are terminated on the dendritic compartments, no such correlated changes occur. In this case, the coupled bursting neurons do not show the in-phase phase-locked state in any bursting mode. These results indicate that synchronization behaviour of bursting neurons significantly depends on the synaptic location, unlike a coupled system of regular spiking neurons.
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