


default search action
Biological Cybernetics, Volume 100
Volume 100, Number 1, January 2009
- J. Leo van Hemmen:
Editorial to volume 100 of Biological Cybernetics. 1-3 - Andrea Greve, David C. Sterratt
, David I. Donaldson
, David J. Willshaw, Mark C. W. van Rossum
:
Optimal learning rules for familiarity detection. 11-19 - Andreas Bahmer
, Gerald Langner:
A simulation of chopper neurons in the cochlear nucleus with wideband input from onset neurons. 21-33 - Claudio Castellini
, Patrick van der Smagt
:
Surface EMG in advanced hand prosthetics. 35-47 - Jacoba E. Smit, Tania Hanekom
, Johan J. Hanekom
:
Modelled temperature-dependent excitability behaviour of a single ranvier node for a human peripheral sensory nerve fibre. 49-58 - Tim C. Kietzmann, Sascha Lange, Martin A. Riedmiller:
Computational object recognition: a biologically motivated approach. 59-79 - Adrian Haith, Sethu Vijayakumar:
Implications of different classes of sensorimotor disturbance for cerebellar-based motor learning models. 81-95
Volume 100, Number 2, February 2009
- Dusan Ristanovic, Nebojsa T. Milosevic, Herbert F. Jelinek, Ivan B. Stefanovic:
Mathematical modelling of neuronal dendritic branching patterns in two dimensions: application to retinal ganglion cells in the cat and rat. 97-108 - Luca Ascari
, Ulisse Bertocchi, Paolo Corradi, Cecilia Laschi
, Paolo Dario:
Bio-inspired grasp control in a robotic hand with massive sensorial input. 109-128 - Andrei V. Sazonov, Chin Keong Ho, Jan W. M. Bergmans, Johan B. A. M. Arends, Paul A. M. Griep, Evgeny A. Verbitskiy
, Pierre J. M. Cluitmans, Paul A. J. M. Boon
:
An investigation of the phase locking index for measuring of interdependency of cortical source signals recorded in the EEG. 129-146 - Eleni Vasilaki
, Stefano Fusi
, Xiao-Jing Wang, Walter Senn
:
Learning flexible sensori-motor mappings in a complex network. 147-158 - Felix Polyakov, Eran Stark
, Rotem Drori, Moshe Abeles, Tamar Flash:
Parabolic movement primitives and cortical states: merging optimality with geometric invariance. 159-184
Volume 100, Number 3, March 2009
- Kameliya Dimova, Michael Denham:
A neurally plausible model of the dynamics of motion integration in smooth eye pursuit based on recursive Bayesian estimation. 185-201 - Francis Colas, Fabien Flacher, Thomas Tanner, Pierre Bessière
, Benoît Girard
:
Bayesian models of eye movement selection with retinotopic maps. 203-214 - Maria Piotrkiewicz
, Lydia Kudina, Michal Jakubiec:
Computer simulation study of the relationship between the profile of excitatory postsynaptic potential and stimulus-correlated motoneuron firing. 215-230 - Paul V. Watkins
, Thomas L. Chen, Dennis L. Barbour
:
A computational framework for topographies of cortical areas. 231-248 - Minija Tamosiunaite, Tamim Asfour
, Florentin Wörgötter:
Learning to reach by reinforcement learning using a receptive field based function approximation approach with continuous actions. 249-260
Volume 100, Number 4, April 2009
- Moritz Bürck, J. Leo van Hemmen:
Neuronal identification of signal periodicity by balanced inhibition. 261-270 - Javier Molina-Vilaplana
, José Luis Contreras-Vidal
, M. T. Herrero-Ezquerro, Juan López Coronado:
A model for altered neural network dynamics related to prehension movements in Parkinson disease. 271-287 - Francisco B. Rodríguez
, Ramón Huerta
:
Techniques for temporal detection of neural sensitivity to external stimulation. 289-297 - R. K. Reddy, V. Ramachandra, N. Kumar, Nandini Chatterjee Singh:
Categorization of environmental sounds. 299-306 - Alexander I. Kostyukov
, S. V. Lytvynenko, N. V. Bulgakova, A. V. Gorkovenko:
Subthreshold activation of spinal motoneurones in the stretch reflex: experimental data and modeling. 307-318 - Boris B. Vladimirskiy, Eleni Vasilaki
, Robert Urbanczik, Walter Senn
:
Stimulus sampling as an exploration mechanism for fast reinforcement learning. 319-330
Volume 100, Number 5, May 2009
- Biljana Petreska, Aude Billard:
Movement curvature planning through force field internal models. 331-350 - Kuntal Ghosh
, Sandip Sarkar, Kamales Bhaumik:
A possible mechanism of stochastic resonance in the light of an extra-classical receptive field model of retinal ganglion cells. 351-359 - Andrew Isaac Meso
, Johannes M. Zanker:
Speed encoding in correlation motion detectors as a consequence of spatial structure. 361-370 - C. A. Brackley, Matthew S. Turner
:
Two-point heterogeneous connections in a continuum neural field model. 371-383 - Francisco Roberto Gomes Cardoso, Frederico Alan de Oliveira Cruz, Dílson Silva
, Célia Martins Cortez:
Computational modeling of synchronization process of the circadian timing system of mammals. 385-393 - Abdul Aziz Bhatti:
Reduced order multiport parallel and multidirectional neural associative memories. 395-407
Volume 100, Number 6, June 2009
- André Longtin, John Rinzel:
Neuronal dynamics of sensory coding: the legacy of Jose Pedro Segundo. 409-411 - George P. Moore:
Afternoons with Segundo. 413-415 - Andrew S. French
:
The systems analysis approach to mechanosensory coding. 417-426 - Rasmus S. Petersen
, Stefano Panzeri
, Miguel Maravall
:
Neural coding and contextual influences in the whisker system. 427-446 - Barry J. Richmond:
Stochasticity, spikes and decoding: sufficiency and utility of order statistics. 447-457 - David R. Brillinger, K. A. Lindsay, J. R. Rosenberg:
Combining frequency and time domain approaches to systems with multiple spike train input and output. 459-474 - Connie Sutherland, Brent Doiron, André Longtin:
Feedback-induced gain control in stochastic spiking networks. 475-489 - Roman Borisyuk
, David Chik, Yakov B. Kazanovich
:
Visual perception of ambiguous figures: synchronization based neural models. 491-504 - Simon Peter Peron, Fabrizio Gabbiani:
Role of spike-frequency adaptation in shaping neuronal response to dynamic stimuli. 505-520 - Brian J. Fischer, José Luis Peña:
Bilateral matching of frequency tuning in neural cross-correlators of the owl. 521-531

manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.