This is the readme for the models associated with the publication Nayak TK, Sikdar SK (2007) Time-dependent molecular memory in single voltage-gated sodium channel. J Membr Biol 219:19-36 Neuronal excitability is associated with firing of action potentials and requires the opening of voltage gated sodium channels with membrane depolarization. Sustained membrane depolarization, as seen in pathophysiological conditions like Epilepsy, can have profound implication on the biophysical properties of voltage gated ion channels. Here we illustrate novel non-linear properties of voltage gated Na+ channel induced by sustained membrane depolarization. In cell-attached patch clamp recordings of rNav1.2 channels expressed in CHO cells, we found complex non-linear changes in the molecular kinetic properties, including channel dwell times and unitary conductance of single Na+ channels that were dependent on the extent of conditioning membrane depolarization. Hidden Markov Model (HMM) suggested that a single kinetic model could not describe the single sodium channel current with varying durations of conditioning depolarization. A "molecular memory" phenomenon arises at longer depolarization characterized by clusters of dwell time events and strong autocorrelation in dwell times. Persistence of such molecular memory was dependent on the duration of conditioning depolarization. HMM modeling also suggested a possible explanation to the memory phenomenon. It suggests that sustained depolarization induces a "time-dependent molecular memory" of previous activity in the channel protein that determines the functional state of the voltage gated Na+ channel, which in turn, can determine the excitability of a neuron. Usage: these models run in the "Yale HMM" software developed in the laboratory of Fred Sigworth at Yale University. The models have been named according to the nomenclature used in Table 1 as well as in the text in the manuscript. These model files were supplied by Tapan Kumar Nayak.