“…Even if such absolute time determinations were possible, the inherent noisiness in neural firing times would result in a varying degree of synchrony over time. Synchrony between spikes has been studied intensely by the nonlinear dynamics community over the past few decades in the context of the synchronization of coupled oscillators (Pikovsky, Rosenblum, & Kurths, 2003); it may play a role in normal brain functions such as attention (Fries, Reynolds, Rorie, & Desimone, 2001;Fries, Womelsdorf, Oostenveld, & Desimone, 2008;Roy, Steinmetz, Hsiao, Johnson, & Niebur, 2007;Steinmetz et al, 2000); it has been applied to the analysis of neural pathologies such as epilepsy (Uhlhaas & Singer, 2006;Wong, Traub, & Miles, 1986) and Parkinson's disease (Tass et al, 2003). But the interesting question about neural synchrony is not whether, in an absolute sense, there is synchrony in a neural process, but rather how much synchrony there is.…”