Leonel Gómez
University of the Republic
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Featured researches published by Leonel Gómez.
Nature | 1998
Gerhard von der Emde; Stephan Schwarz; Leonel Gómez; Ruben Budelli; Kirsty Grant
Distance determination in animals can be achieved by visual or non-visual cues. Weakly electric fish use active electrolocation for orientation in the dark. By perceiving self-produced electric signals with epidermal electroreceptors, fish can detect, locate and analyse nearby objects. Distance discrimination, however, was thought to be hardly possible because it was assumed that confusing ambiguity could arise with objects of unknown sizes and materials. Here we show that during electrolocation electric fish can measure the distance of most objects accurately, independently of size, shape and material. Measurements of the ‘electric image’ projected onto the skin surface during electrolocation revealed only one parameter combination that was unambiguously related to object distance: the ratio between maximal image slope and maximal image amplitude. However, slope-to-amplitude ratios for spheres were always smaller than those for other objects. As predicted, these objects were erroneously judged by the fish to be further away than all other objects at an identical distance. Our results suggest a novel mechanism for depth perception that can be achieved with a single, stationary two-dimensional array of detectors.
Journal of Neurophysiology | 2008
Sebastian Curti; Leonel Gómez; Ruben Budelli; Alberto E. Pereda
Primary auditory afferents are generally perceived as passive, timing-preserving lines of communication. Contrasting this view, identifiable auditory afferents to the goldfish Mauthner cell undergo potentiation of their mixed--electrical and chemical--synapses in response to high-frequency bursts of activity. This property likely represents a mechanism of input sensitization because they provide the Mauthner cell with essential information for the initiation of an escape response. Consistent with this synaptic specialization, we show here that these afferents exhibit an intrinsic ability to respond with bursts of 200-600 Hz and this property critically relies on the activation of a persistent sodium current, which is counterbalanced by the delayed activation of an A-type potassium current. Furthermore, the interaction between these conductances with the membrane passive properties supports the presence of electrical resonance, whose frequency preference is consistent with both the effective range of hearing in goldfish and the firing frequencies required for synaptic facilitation, an obligatory requisite for the induction of activity-dependent changes. Thus our data show that the presence of a persistent sodium current is functionally essential and allows these afferents to translate behaviorally relevant auditory signals into patterns of activity that match the requirements of their fast and highly modifiable synapses. The functional specializations of these neurons suggest that auditory afferents might be capable of more sophisticated contributions to auditory processing than has been generally recognized.
Biological Cybernetics | 1996
Leonel Gómez; Ruben Budelli
The behavior of two pacemaker neurons simulated by leaky integrators and connected reciprocally by synapses was studied. In every case the firing of both neurons phase-locks. The resulting limit cycle may or may not show simultaneous firing of both neurons. When both synapses are excitatory, phase-locking with simultaneous neuronal firing is always present. When one synapse is excitatory and the other inhibitory, phase-locking is also present always, while the neurons may or may not fire simultaneously. For a restricted set of parameters, bistability appears; the initial conditions determine whether or not the limit cycle presents simultaneous firing. When both synapses are inhibitory, the system phase-locks without simultaneous firing for almost every set of parameters.
Biological Cybernetics | 2005
Leonel Gómez; Ruben Budelli; Rafael Saa; Michael Stiber; J. P. Segundo
The pooled spike trains of correlated presynaptic terminals acting synchronously upon a single neuron are realizations of cluster point processes: the notions of spikes synchronizing in bursts and of points bunching in clusters are conceptually identical. The primary processes constituent specifies the timing of the cluster series; subsidiary processes and poolings specify burst structure and tightness. This representation and the Poisson process representation of independent terminals complete the formal approach to pooled trains. The notion’s usefulness was illustrated by expressing physiological questions in terms of those constituents, each possessing a clear biological embodiment; constituents provided the control variables in simulations using leaky integrate-and-fire postsynaptic neurons excited by multiple weak terminals. Regular or irregular primary processes and bursts series determined low or high postsynaptic dispersions. When convergent set synchrony increased, its postsynaptic consequences approached those of single powerful synapses; concomitantly, output spike trains approached periodic, quasiperiodic, or aperiodic behaviors. The sequence in which terminals fired within bursts affected the predictee and predictor roles of presynaptic and postsynaptic spikes; when inhibition was added, EPSP and IPSP delays and order were influential (summation was noncommutative). Outputs to different correlations were heterogeneous; heterogeneity was accentuated by conditioning by variables such as DC biases.
The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2004
Leonel Gómez; Ruben Budelli; Kirsty Grant; Angel A. Caputi
BioSystems | 2003
Diego Rother; Adriana Migliaro; Rafael Canetti; Leonel Gómez; Angel A. Caputi; Ruben Budelli
The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2005
Leonel Gómez; Morten Kanneworff; Ruben Budelli; Kirsty Grant
Journal of Neurophysiology | 2007
Erwin H. van den Burg; Jacob Engelmann; Joao Bacelo; Leonel Gómez; Kirsty Grant
Nonlinear Analysis-theory Methods & Applications | 1997
Ruben Budelli; Eleonora Catsigeras; Alvaro Rovella; Leonel Gómez
Biological Cybernetics | 1996
Leonel Gómez; Ruben Budelli