I am studying the thermal history of the universe and I encountered the definition of effective degrees of freedom $g_{*}(T)$ defined as $$g_{*}(T)=\sum_{Bosons}g_{B}(\frac{T_{B}}{T})^{4}+\frac{7}{8}\sum_{Fermions}g_{F}(\frac{T_{F}}{T})^{4}$$ Now, in the computation of this factor, we need to consider just relativistic particles since the NR ones are suppressed from the Boltzmann factor. But what about decoupled particles? Do we have to consider them?
I am making this question because it's always written that neutrino decouples at $T ≃ 1$ Mev , and if we want to compute $g_{*}(T=0.1 Mev)$ we have to consider just photons and neutrinos, since they are the only relativistic particles left (Notice that we are considering neutrinos that are already decoupled at that temperature).
On the other hand when computing the ratio $\frac{T_{\nu0}}{T_{CMB}}$ one has to compute the factor ($\epsilon<<1$) $$\frac{T_{\nu0}}{T_{CMB}}=\bigl(\frac{g_{*s}(t_{e}-\epsilon)}{g_{*s}(t_{e}+\epsilon)}\bigr)^{1/3}=(\frac{4}{11})^{1/3}$$ where I've indicated with $t_{e}$ the instant at which electrons become non relativistic. The problem is that I don't understand why, in the latter $g_{*s}(t_{e}-\epsilon)=2+\frac{7}{8}\cdot2\cdot2$, we consider only photons and electrons, forgetting about neutrinos which are decoupled but still relativistic right?
Those two computations seems to be in contrast in a sense that in one case I consider decoupled neutrinos while on the other I forget them. What do I miss here?