Abstract: | Modifications based on experimental results reported in the literature are made to the Hodgkin-Huxley equations to describe the electrophysiological behavior of the Aplysia abdominal ganglion R15 cell. The system is then further modified to describe the effects with the application of the drug tetrodotoxin (TTX) to the cells' bathing medium. Methods of the qualitative theory of differential equations are used to determine the conditions necessary for such a system of equations to have an oscillatory solution. A model satisfying these conditions is shown to preduct many experimental observations of R15 cell behavior. Numerical solutions are obtained for differential equations satisfying the conditions of the model. These solutions are shown to have a form similar to that of the bursting which is characteristic of this cell, and to preduct many results of experiments conducted on this cell. The physiological implications of the model are discussed. |