Why do olfactory neurons have unspecific receptive fields?

scientific article published on 01 October 2002

Why do olfactory neurons have unspecific receptive fields? is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1016/S0303-2647(02)00081-3
P698PubMed publication ID12459303

P50authorManuel Sánchez-MontañésQ62050299
P2093author name stringTim C Pearce
P2860cites workA novel multigene family may encode odorant receptors: a molecular basis for odor recognitionQ28276183
A systems perspective on early olfactory codingQ33757131
Odor response properties of rat olfactory receptor neuronsQ33866088
Simple models for reading neuronal population codesQ36671081
Receptor cell responses to odorants: similarities and differences among odorantsQ41432953
Transduction mechanisms in vertebrate olfactory receptor cellsQ41751229
Reading population codes: a neural implementation of ideal observersQ48158337
Representational accuracy of stochastic neural populations.Q64922521
Excitation, inhibition, and suppression by odors in isolated toad and rat olfactory receptor neuronsQ74013568
Mutual information, Fisher information, and population codingQ77323451
Neuronal tuning: To sharpen or broaden?Q78019991
Narrow versus wide tuning curves: What's best for a population code?Q78019995
The effect of correlated variability on the accuracy of a population codeQ78019998
P433issue1-3
P304page(s)229-238
P577publication date2002-10-01
P1433published inBioSystemsQ2025895
P1476titleWhy do olfactory neurons have unspecific receptive fields?
P478volume67

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q30391099Central auditory neurons have composite receptive fields
Q38666941Map formation in the olfactory bulb by axon guidance of olfactory neurons
Q36632267Olfactory bulb mitral-tufted cell plasticity: odorant-specific tuning reflects previous odorant exposure
Q28480505Quality coding by neural populations in the early olfactory pathway: analysis using information theory and lessons for artificial olfactory systems