How to get started with NEURON

Installation

If you haven’t already, install NEURON. Detailed instructions for special cases are available here, but in brief, you’ll probably want to install Python (there are many options; Anaconda is one such option). On Linux and macOS, you can then install NEURON by typing pip install neuron. On Windows, use the latest NEURON installer from our GitHub site. For parallel simulation, you will also want to install a version of MPI.

Forum

You’ll likely have questions. Join The NEURON Forum to ask and answer questions.

Basic NEURON Usage

  • Watch recorded videos from various recent NEURON and NEURON-related courses.
  • Read “The NEURON Simulation Environment.”
  • Use the Programmer’s Reference early and often.
  • Work through the tutorials on the Documentation and Courses pages.
  • Use the GUI tools as much as possible. You’ll get more done, faster, and you won’t have to write any code. Some of the GUI tools are described in the tutorials; others are demoed in the course videos. Save the GUI tools to session files; these files contain HOC and can be modified, adapted, and reused.
  • Examine ModelDB and the list of publications about NEURON to find models of interest. Many authors have deposited their model code in ModelDB, posted it somewhere else on the WWW, or will provide code upon request.

Using NMODL to add new mechanisms to NEURON

  • First, consider using the ChannelBuilder instead. This is an extremely powerful GUI tool for specifying voltage- and ligand-gated ionic conductances. It’s much easier to use than NMODL. Mechanisms specified with the ChannelBuilder actually execute faster than if they were specified with NMODL. Also, you can use it to make stochastic channel models.
  • If you absolutely must use NMODL (e.g. for ion accumulation mechanisms or to add new kinds of artificial spiking cells), read chapters 9 and 10 of The NEURON Book, or at least the articles “Expanding NEURON’s Repertoire of Mechanisms with NMODL” and “Discrete event simulation in the NEURON environment”.
  • NEURON comes with a bunch of mod files that can serve as starting points for “programming by example.” Under MSWin the default mechanisms (hh, pas, expsyn etc.) are in github.com/neuronsimulator/nrn/tree/master/src/nrnoc. A large collection of mod files is at github.com/neuronsimulator/nrn/tree/master/share/examples/nrniv/nmodl.
  • You may also find useful examples in ModelDB.