Computational Neuroscience: A First Course

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Computational Neuroscience - A First Course provides an essential introduction to computational neuroscience and equips readers with a fundamental understanding of modeling the nervous system at the membrane, cellular, and network level. The book, which grew out of a lecture series held regularly for more than ten years to graduate students in neuroscience with backgrounds in biology, psychology and medicine, takes its readers on a journey through three fundamental domains of computational neuroscience: membrane biophysics, systems theory and artificial neural networks. The required mathematical concepts are kept as intuitive and simple as possible throughout the book, making it fully accessible to readers who are less familiar with mathematics. Overall, Computational Neuroscience - A First Course represents an essential reference guide for all neuroscientists who use computational methods in their daily work, as well as for any theoretical scientist approaching the field of computational neuroscience.

Author(s): Hanspeter A Mallot (auth.)
Series: Springer Series in Bio-/Neuroinformatics 2
Edition: 1
Publisher: Springer International Publishing
Year: 2013

Language: English
Pages: 135
Tags: Computational Intelligence;Neurosciences;Complexity

Front Matter....Pages 1-10
Excitable Membranes and Neural Conduction....Pages 1-21
Receptive Fields and the Specificity of Neuronal Firing....Pages 23-55
Fourier Analysis for Neuroscientists....Pages 57-81
Artificial Neural Networks....Pages 83-112
Coding and Representation....Pages 113-129
Back Matter....Pages 131-135