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. 1972 Jan;12(1):25–45. doi: 10.1016/S0006-3495(72)86069-7

Cable Theory for Finite Length Dendritic Cylinders with Initial and Boundary Conditions

Richard S Norman
PMCID: PMC1484077  PMID: 5007242

Abstract

The cable equation is solved in the Laplace transform domain for arbitrary initial and boundary conditions. The cable potential is expressed directly in terms of the impedance of the terminations and the cable electrotonic length. A computer program is given to invert the transform. Numerical solutions may be obtained for any particular model by inserting expressions describing the terminations and parameter values into the program, without further computation by the modeler. For a finite length cable, sealed at one end, the solution is expressed in terms of the ratio of the termination impedance to the impedance of the finite length cable, a generalization of the steady-state conductance ratio. Analysis of a model of a soma with several primary dendrites shows that the dendrites may be lumped into one equivalent cylinder if they have the same electrotonic length, even though they may vary in diameter. Responses obtained under voltage clamp are conceptually predictable from measurements made under current clamp, and vice versa. The equalizing time constants of an infinite series expression of the solution are the negative reciprocals of the roots of the characteristic equation. Examination of computed solutions shows that solutions which differ theoretically may be indistinguishable experimentally.

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Selected References

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