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Computational modeling has become an increasingly important method in neural engineering due to its capacity to predict behaviors of in vivo and in vitro systems. This has the key advantage of minimizing the number of animals required in a given study by providing an often very precise prediction of physiological outcomes. In the field of visual prosthesis, computational modeling has an array of practical applications, including informing the design of an implantable electrode array and prediction of visual percepts that may be elicited through the delivery of electrical impulses from the said array. Some models described in the literature combine a three-dimensional (3D) morphology to compute the electric field and a cable model of the neuron or neural network of interest. To increase the accessibility of this two-step method to researchers who may have limited prior experience in computational modeling, we provide a video of the fundamental approaches to be taken in order to construct a computational model and utilize it in predicting the physiological and psychophysical outcomes of stimulation protocols deployed via a visual prosthesis. The guide comprises the steps to build a 3D model in a finite element modeling (FEM) software, the construction of a retinal ganglion cell model in a multi-compartmental neuron computational software, followed by the amalgamation of the two. A finite element modeling software to numerically solve physical equations would be used to solve electric field distribution in the electrical stimulations of tissue. Then, specialized software to simulate the electrical activities of a neural cell or network was used. To follow this tutorial, familiarity with the working principle of a neuroprosthesis, as well as neurophysiological concepts (e.g., action potential mechanism and an understanding of the Hodgkin-Huxley model), would be required. |