Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
technology/operating-systems

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Neuroplasticity

Ability of the brain to continuously change

Neuroplasticity

Ability of the brain to continuously change

Neuroplasticity, also known as neural plasticity or just plasticity, is the medium of neural networks in the brain to change through growth and reorganization. Neuroplasticity refers to the brain's ability to reorganize and rewire its neural connections, enabling it to adapt and function in ways that differ from its prior state. This process can occur in response to learning new skills, experiencing environmental changes, recovering from injuries, or adapting to sensory or cognitive deficits. Such adaptability highlights the dynamic and ever-evolving nature of the brain, even into adulthood. These changes range from individual neuron pathways making new connections, to systematic adjustments like cortical remapping or neural oscillation. Other forms of neuroplasticity include homologous area adaptation, cross modal reassignment, map expansion, and compensatory masquerade. Examples of neuroplasticity include circuit and network changes that result from learning a new ability, information acquisition, environmental influences, pregnancy, caloric intake, practice/training, and psychological stress.

Neuroplasticity was once thought by neuroscientists to manifest only during childhood, but research in the later half of the 20th century showed that many aspects of the brain exhibit plasticity through adulthood. The developing brain exhibits a higher degree of plasticity than the adult brain. Activity-dependent plasticity can have significant implications for healthy development, learning, memory, and recovery from brain damage.

History

Origin

The term plasticity was first applied to behavior in 1890 by William James in The Principles of Psychology where the term was used to describe "a structure weak enough to yield to an influence, but strong enough not to yield all at once". The first person to use the term neural plasticity appears to have been the Polish neuroscientist Jerzy Konorski.

One of the first experiments providing evidence for neuroplasticity was conducted in 1793, by Italian anatomist Michele Vincenzo Malacarne, who described experiments in which he paired animals, trained one of the pair extensively for years, and then dissected both. Malacarne discovered that the cerebellums of the trained animals were substantially larger than the cerebellum of the untrained animals. However, while these findings were significant, they were eventually forgotten. In 1890, the idea that the brain and its function are not fixed throughout adulthood was proposed by William James in The Principles of Psychology, though the idea was largely neglected. Up until the 1970s, neuroscientists believed that the brain's structure and function was essentially fixed throughout adulthood.

While the brain was commonly understood as a nonrenewable organ in the early 1900s, the pioneering neuroscientist Santiago Ramón y Cajal used the term neuronal plasticity to describe nonpathological changes in the structure of adult brains. Based on his renowned neuron doctrine, Cajal first described the neuron as the fundamental unit of the nervous system that later served as an essential foundation to develop the concept of neural plasticity. Many neuroscientists used the term plasticity to explain the regenerative capacity of the peripheral nervous system only. Cajal, however, used the term plasticity to reference his findings of degeneration and regeneration in the adult brain (a part of the central nervous system). This was controversial, with some like Walther Spielmeyer and Max Bielschowsky arguing that the CNS cannot produce new cells.

The term has since been broadly applied:

Research and discovery

In 1923, Karl Lashley conducted experiments on rhesus monkeys that demonstrated changes in neuronal pathways, which he concluded were evidence of plasticity. Despite this, and other research that suggested plasticity, neuroscientists did not widely accept the idea of neuroplasticity.

Inspired by work from Nicolas Rashevsky, in 1943, McCulloch and Pitts proposed the artificial neuron, with a learning rule, whereby new synapses are produced when neurons fire simultaneously. This is then extensively discussed in The organization of behavior (Hebb, 1949) and is now known as Hebbian learning.

In 1945, Justo Gonzalo concluded from his research on brain dynamics, that, contrary to the activity of the projection areas, the "central" cortical mass (more or less equidistant from the visual, tactile and auditive projection areas), would be a "maneuvering mass", rather unspecific or multisensory, with capacity to increase neural excitability and re-organize the activity by means of plasticity properties. He gives as a first example of adaptation, to see upright with reversing glasses in the Stratton experiment, and specially, several first-hand brain injuries cases in which he observed dynamic and adaptive properties in their disorders, in particular in the inverted perception disorder [e.g., see pp 260–62 Vol. I (1945), p 696 Vol. II (1950)]. He stated that a sensory signal in a projection area would be only an inverted and constricted outline that would be magnified due to the increase in recruited cerebral mass, and re-inverted due to some effect of brain plasticity, in more central areas, following a spiral growth.{{Cite journal | author-link = Justo Gonzalo

Marian Diamond of the University of California, Berkeley, produced the first scientific evidence of anatomical brain plasticity, publishing her research in 1964.

Other significant evidence was produced in the 1960s and after, notably from scientists including Paul Bach-y-Rita, Michael Merzenich along with Jon Kaas, as well as several others. An attempt to describe the mechanisms of neuroplasticity, an early version of the computational theory of mind derived from Hebb's work, was put forward by Peter Putnam and Robert W. Fuller in that time.

In the 1960s, Paul Bach-y-Rita invented a device that was tested on a small number of people, and involved a person sitting in a chair, embedded in which were nubs that were made to vibrate in ways that translated images received in a camera, allowing a form of vision via sensory substitution.

Studies in people recovering from stroke also provided support for neuroplasticity, as regions of the brain that remained healthy could sometimes take over, at least in part, functions that had been destroyed; Shepherd Ivory Franz did work in this area.

Eleanor Maguire documented changes in hippocampal structure associated with acquiring the knowledge of London's layout in local taxi drivers. A redistribution of grey matter was indicated in London Taxi Drivers compared to controls. This work on hippocampal plasticity not only interested scientists, but also engaged the public and media worldwide.

Michael Merzenich is a neuroscientist who has been one of the pioneers of neuroplasticity for over three decades. He has made some of "the most ambitious claims for the field – that brain exercises may be as useful as drugs to treat diseases as severe as schizophrenia – that plasticity exists from cradle to the grave, and that radical improvements in cognitive functioning – how we learn, think, perceive, and remember are possible even in the elderly." Merzenich's work was affected by a crucial discovery made by David Hubel and Torsten Wiesel in their work with kittens. The experiment involved sewing one eye shut and recording the cortical brain maps. Hubel and Wiesel saw that the portion of the kitten's brain associated with the shut eye was not idle, as expected. Instead, it processed visual information from the open eye. It was "…as though the brain didn't want to waste any 'cortical real estate' and had found a way to rewire itself."

This implied neuroplasticity during the critical period. However, Merzenich argued that neuroplasticity could occur beyond the critical period. His first encounter with adult plasticity came when he was engaged in a postdoctoral study with Clinton Woosley. The experiment was based on observation of what occurred in the brain when one peripheral nerve was cut and subsequently regenerated. The two scientists micromapped the hand maps of monkey brains before and after cutting a peripheral nerve and sewing the ends together. Afterwards, the hand map in the brain that they expected to be jumbled was nearly normal. This was a substantial breakthrough. Merzenich asserted that, "If the brain map could normalize its structure in response to abnormal input, the prevailing view that we are born with a hardwired system had to be wrong. The brain had to be plastic." Merzenich received the 2016 Kavli Prize in Neuroscience "for the discovery of mechanisms that allow experience and neural activity to remodel brain function."

Neurobiology

There are different ideas and theories on what biological processes allow for neuroplasticity to occur. The core of this phenomenon is based upon synapses and how connections between them change based on neuron functioning. It is widely agreed upon that neuroplasticity takes on many forms, as it is a result of a variety of pathways. These pathways, mainly signaling cascades, allow for gene expression alterations that lead to neuronal changes, and thus neuroplasticity.

There are a number of other factors that are thought to play a role in the biological processes underlying the changing of neural networks in the brain. Some of these factors include synapse regulation via phosphorylation, the role of inflammation and inflammatory cytokines, proteins such as Bcl-2 proteins and neutrophorins, energy production via mitochondria, and acetylcholine.

JT Wall and J Xu have traced the mechanisms underlying neuroplasticity. Re-organization is not cortically emergent, but occurs at every level in the processing hierarchy; this produces the map changes observed in the cerebral cortex.

Types

Christopher Shaw and Jill McEachern (eds) in "Toward a theory of Neuroplasticity", state that there is no all-inclusive theory that overarches different frameworks and systems in the study of neuroplasticity. However, researchers often describe neuroplasticity as "the ability to make adaptive changes related to the structure and function of the nervous system." Correspondingly, two types of neuroplasticity are often discussed: structural neuroplasticity and functional neuroplasticity.

Structural neuroplasticity

Structural plasticity is often understood as the brain's ability to change its neuronal connections. The changes of grey matter proportion or the synaptic strength in the brain are considered as examples of structural neuroplasticity. This type of neuroplasticity often studies the effect of various internal or external stimuli on the brain's anatomical reorganization. New neurons are constantly produced and integrated into the central nervous system based on this type of neuroplasticity. Researchers nowadays use multiple cross-sectional imaging methods (i.e. magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), computerized tomography (CT)) to study the structural alterations of the human brains. Structural neuroplasticity is currently investigated more within the field of neuroscience in current academia. Adult neurogenesis "has not been convincingly demonstrated in humans".

Functional neuroplasticity

Functional plasticity refers to the brain's ability to alter and adapt the functional properties of network of neurons. It can occur in four known ways namely:

  1. homologous area adaptation
  2. map expansion
  3. cross-model reassignment
  4. compensatory masquerade.

Homologous area adaptation

Homologous area adaptation is the assumption of a particular cognitive process by a homologous region in the opposite hemisphere. For instance, through homologous area adaptation a cognitive task is shifted from a damaged part of the brain to its homologous area in opposite side of the brain. Homologous area adaptation is a type of functional neuroplasticity that occur usually in children rather than adults.

Map expansion

In map expansion, cortical maps related to particular cognitive tasks expand due to frequent exposure to stimuli. Map expansion has been proven through experiments performed in relation to the study: experiment on effect of frequent stimulus on functional connectivity of the brain was observed in individuals learning spatial routes.

Cross-model reassignment

Cross-model reassignment involves reception of novel input signals to a brain region which has been stripped of its default input.

Compensatory masquerade

Functional plasticity through compensatory masquerade occurs using different cognitive processes for an already established cognitive task when the initial process cannot be followed due to impairment.

Changes in the brain associated with functional neuroplasticity can occur in response to two different types of events:

  • previous activity (activity-dependent plasticity) to acquire memory or
  • in response to malfunction or damage of neurons (maladaptive plasticity) to compensate a pathological event

In the latter case the functions from one part of the brain transfer to another part of the brain based on the demand to produce recovery of behavioral or physiological processes. Regarding physiological forms of activity-dependent plasticity, those involving synapses are referred to as synaptic plasticity. The strengthening or weakening of synapses that results in an increase or decrease of firing rate of the neurons are called long-term potentiation (LTP) and long-term depression (LTD), respectively, and they are considered as examples of synaptic plasticity that are associated with memory. The cerebellum is a typical structure with combinations of LTP/LTD and redundancy within the circuitry, allowing plasticity at several sites. More recently it has become clearer that synaptic plasticity can be complemented by another form of activity-dependent plasticity involving the intrinsic excitability of neurons, which is referred to as intrinsic plasticity. This, as opposed to homeostatic plasticity does not necessarily maintain the overall activity of a neuron within a network but contributes to encoding memories. Also, many studies have indicated functional neuroplasticity in the level of brain networks, where training alters the strength of functional connections. Although a recent study discusses that these observed changes should not directly relate to neuroplasticity, since they may root in the systematic requirement of the brain network for reorganization.

Applications and examples

The adult brain is not entirely "hard-wired" with fixed neuronal circuits. There are many instances of cortical and subcortical rewiring of neuronal circuits in response to training as well as in response to injury.

There is ample evidence for the active, experience-dependent re-organization of the synaptic networks of the brain involving multiple inter-related structures including the cerebral cortex.{{Cite journal |last1=Scheler |first1=Gabriele |date=January 2023 |title=Sketch of a novel approach to a neural model

There is evidence that neurogenesis (birth of brain cells) occurs in the adult, rodent brain—and such changes can persist well into old age. The evidence for neurogenesis is mainly restricted to the hippocampus and olfactory bulb, but research has revealed that other parts of the brain, including the cerebellum, may be involved as well. However, the degree of rewiring induced by the integration of new neurons in the established circuits is not known, and such rewiring may well be functionally redundant.

Addiction

Treatment of brain damage

A surprising consequence of neuroplasticity is that the brain activity associated with a given function can be transferred to a different location; this can result from normal experience and also occurs in the process of recovery from brain injury. Neuroplasticity is the fundamental issue that supports the scientific basis for treatment of acquired brain injury with goal-directed experiential therapeutic programs in the context of rehabilitation approaches to the functional consequences of the injury.

Neuroplasticity is gaining popularity as a theory that, at least in part, explains improvements in functional outcomes with physical therapy post-stroke. Rehabilitation techniques that are supported by evidence which suggest cortical reorganization as the mechanism of change include constraint-induced movement therapy, functional electrical stimulation, treadmill training with body-weight support, and virtual reality therapy. Robot assisted therapy is an emerging technique, which is also hypothesized to work by way of neuroplasticity, though there is currently insufficient evidence to determine the exact mechanisms of change when using this method.

One group has developed a treatment that includes increased levels of progesterone injections in brain-injured patients. "Administration of progesterone after traumatic brain injury (TBI) and stroke reduces edema, inflammation, and neuronal cell death, and enhances spatial reference memory and sensory-motor recovery." In a clinical trial, a group of severely injured patients had a 60% reduction in mortality after three days of progesterone injections. However, a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2014 detailing the results of a multi-center NIH-funded phase III clinical trial of 882 patients found that treatment of acute traumatic brain injury with the hormone progesterone provides no significant benefit to patients when compared with placebo.

Binocular vision

For decades, researchers assumed that humans had to acquire binocular vision, in particular stereopsis, in early childhood or they would never gain it. In recent years, however, successful improvements in persons with amblyopia, convergence insufficiency or other stereo vision anomalies have become prime examples of neuroplasticity; binocular vision improvements and stereopsis recovery are now active areas of scientific and clinical research.

Phantom limbs

A diagrammatic explanation of the mirror box. The patient places the intact limb into one side of the box (in this case the right hand) and the amputated limb into the other side. Due to the mirror, the patient sees a reflection of the intact hand where the missing limb would be (indicated in lower contrast). The patient thus receives artificial visual feedback that the "resurrected" limb is now moving when they move the good hand.

Main article: Phantom limb, Mirror box

In the phenomenon of phantom limb sensation, a person continues to feel pain or sensation within a part of their body that has been amputated. This is strangely common, occurring in 60–80% of amputees. An explanation for this is based on the concept of neuroplasticity, as the cortical maps of the removed limbs are believed to have become engaged with the area around them in the postcentral gyrus. This results in activity within the surrounding area of the cortex being misinterpreted by the area of the cortex formerly responsible for the amputated limb.

The relationship between phantom limb sensation and neuroplasticity is a complex one. In the early 1990s V.S. Ramachandran theorized that phantom limbs were the result of cortical remapping. However, in 1995 Herta Flor and her colleagues demonstrated that cortical remapping occurs only in patients who have phantom pain. Her research showed that phantom limb pain (rather than referred sensations) was the perceptual correlate of cortical reorganization. This phenomenon is sometimes referred to as maladaptive plasticity.

In 2009, Lorimer Moseley and Peter Brugger carried out an experiment in which they encouraged arm amputee subjects to use visual imagery to contort their phantom limbs into impossible configurations. Four of the seven subjects succeeded in performing impossible movements of the phantom limb. This experiment suggests that the subjects had modified the neural representation of their phantom limbs and generated the motor commands needed to execute impossible movements in the absence of feedback from the body.

Chronic pain

Main article: Chronic pain

Individuals who have chronic pain experience prolonged pain at sites that may have been previously injured, yet are otherwise currently healthy. This phenomenon is related to neuroplasticity due to a maladaptive reorganization of the nervous system, both peripherally and centrally. During the period of tissue damage, noxious stimuli and inflammation cause an elevation of nociceptive input from the periphery to the central nervous system. Prolonged nociception from the periphery then elicits a neuroplastic response at the cortical level to change its somatotopic organization for the painful site, inducing central sensitization. For instance, individuals experiencing complex regional pain syndrome demonstrate a diminished cortical somatotopic representation of the hand contralaterally as well as a decreased spacing between the hand and the mouth. Additionally, chronic pain has been reported to significantly reduce the volume of grey matter in the brain globally, and more specifically at the prefrontal cortex and right thalamus. However, following treatment, these abnormalities in cortical reorganization and grey matter volume are resolved, as well as their symptoms. Similar results have been reported for phantom limb pain, chronic low back pain and carpal tunnel syndrome.

Meditation

Main article: Research on meditation

A number of studies have linked meditation practice to differences in cortical thickness or density of gray matter. One of the most well-known studies to demonstrate this was led by Sara Lazar, from Harvard University, in 2000. Richard Davidson, a neuroscientist at the University of Wisconsin, has led experiments in collaboration with the Dalai Lama on effects of meditation on the brain. His results suggest that meditation may lead to change in the physical structure of brain regions associated with attention, anxiety, depression, fear, anger, and compassion as well as the ability of the body to heal itself.

Artistic engagement and art therapy

There is substantial evidence that artistic engagement in a therapeutic environment can create changes in neural network connections as well as increase cognitive flexibility. In one 2013 study, researchers found evidence that long-term, habitual artistic training (e.g. musical instrument practice, purposeful painting, etc.) can "macroscopically imprint a neural network system of spontaneous activity in which the related brain regions become functionally and topologically modularized in both domain-general and domain-specific manners". In simple terms, brains repeatedly exposed to artistic training over long periods develop adaptations to make such activity both easier and more likely to spontaneously occur.

Some researchers and academics have suggested that artistic engagement has substantially altered the human brain throughout our evolutionary history. D.W Zaidel, adjunct professor of behavioral neuroscience and contributor at VAGA, has written that "evolutionary theory links the symbolic nature of art to critical pivotal brain changes in Homo sapiens supporting increased development of language and hierarchical social grouping".

Music therapy

There is evidence that engaging in music-supported therapy can improve neuroplasticity in patients who are recovering from brain injuries. Music-supported therapy can be used for patients that are undergoing stroke rehabilitation where a one month study of stroke patients participating in music-supported therapy showed a significant improvement in motor control in their affected hand. Another finding was the examination of grey matter volume of adults developing brain atrophy and cognitive decline where playing a musical instrument, such as the piano, or listening to music can increase grey matter volume in areas such as the caudate nucleus, Rolandic operculum, and cerebellum. Evidence also suggests that music-supported therapy can improve cognitive performance, well-being, and social behavior in patients who are recovering from damage to the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) and recovering from mild traumatic brain injury. Neuroimaging post music-supported therapy revealed functional changes in OFC networks, with improvements observed in both task-based and resting-state fMRI analyses.

Beyond clinical rehabilitation, music has been shown to induce neuroplastic changes in healthy individuals through long-term training and repeated exposure. Studies comparing musicians and non-musicians have demonstrated structural and functional brain differences associated with musical practice, particularly when training begins early in life.[98] Musicians often exhibit increased gray and white matter volume in motor, auditory, and cerebellar regions, reflecting adaptations related to fine motor control, auditory processing, and timing. Evidence of cortical remapping has also been observed, such as enlarged cortical representations of the fingers most frequently used during instrument performance.

Music training strongly affects the auditory system, with musicians showing enhanced activation and structural differences in primary and secondary auditory cortices involved in processing pitch, rhythm, and melody. Functional changes have been observed not only at the cortical level but also in subcortical structures, including the brainstem, where musicians demonstrate faster and stronger neural responses to sound. Across the lifespan, sustained musical engagement has been associated with reduced age-related decline in certain brain regions and a lower risk of cognitive impairment, suggesting that music-related neuroplasticity may contribute to long-term brain health.

Fitness and exercise

Aerobic exercise increases the production of neurotrophic factors (compounds that promote growth or survival of neurons), such as brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1), and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). Exercise-induced effects on the hippocampus are associated with measurable improvements in spatial memory. Consistent aerobic exercise over a period of several months induces marked clinically significant improvements in executive function (i.e., the "cognitive control" of behavior) and increased gray matter volume in multiple brain regions, particularly those that give rise to cognitive control. The brain structures that show the greatest improvements in gray matter volume in response to aerobic exercise are the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus; moderate improvements are seen in the anterior cingulate cortex, parietal cortex, cerebellum, caudate nucleus, and nucleus accumbens. Higher physical fitness scores (measured by VO2 max) are associated with better executive function, faster processing speed, and greater volume of the hippocampus, caudate nucleus, and nucleus accumbens.

Deafness and loss of hearing

Due to hearing loss, the auditory cortex and other association areas of the brain in deaf and/or hard of hearing people undergo compensatory plasticity. The auditory cortex usually reserved for processing auditory information in hearing people now is redirected to serve other functions, especially for vision and somatosensation.

Deaf individuals have enhanced peripheral visual attention, better motion change but not color change detection ability in visual tasks, more effective visual search, and faster response time for visual targets compared to hearing individuals. Altered visual processing in deaf people is often found to be associated with the repurposing of other brain areas including primary auditory cortex, posterior parietal association cortex (PPAC), and anterior cingulate cortex (ACC). A review by Bavelier et al. (2006) summarizes many aspects on the topic of visual ability comparison between deaf and hearing individuals.

Brain areas that serve a function in auditory processing repurpose to process somatosensory information in congenitally deaf people. They have higher sensitivity in detecting frequency change in vibration above threshold and higher and more widespread activation in auditory cortex under somatosensory stimulation. However, speeded response for somatosensory stimuli is not found in deaf adults.

Cochlear implant

Neuroplasticity is involved in the development of sensory function. The brain is born immature and then adapts to sensory inputs after birth. In the auditory system, congenital hearing loss, a rather frequent inborn condition affecting 1 of 1000 newborns, has been shown to affect auditory development, and implantation of a sensory prostheses activating the auditory system has prevented the deficits and induced functional maturation of the auditory system. Due to a sensitive period for plasticity, there is also a sensitive period for such intervention within the first 2–4 years of life. Consequently, in prelingually deaf children, early cochlear implantation, as a rule, allows the children to learn the mother language and acquire acoustic communication.

Blindness

Due to vision loss, the visual cortex in blind people may undergo cross-modal plasticity, and therefore other senses may have enhanced abilities. Or the opposite could occur, with the lack of visual input weakening the development of other sensory systems. One study suggests that the right posterior middle temporal gyrus and superior occipital gyrus reveal more activation in the blind than in the sighted people during a sound-moving detection task. Several studies support the latter idea and found weakened ability in audio distance evaluation, proprioceptive reproduction, threshold for visual bisection, and judging minimum audible angle.

Human echolocation

Human echolocation is a learned ability for humans to sense their environment from echoes. This ability is used by some blind people to navigate their environment and sense their surroundings in detail. Studies in 2010 and 2011 using functional magnetic resonance imaging techniques have shown that parts of the brain associated with visual processing are adapted for the new skill of echolocation. Studies with blind patients, for example, suggest that the click-echoes heard by these patients were processed by brain regions devoted to vision rather than audition.

Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder

Reviews of MRI and electroencephalography (EEG) studies on individuals with ADHD suggest that the long-term treatment of ADHD with stimulants, such as amphetamine or methylphenidate, decreases abnormalities in brain structure and function found in subjects with ADHD, and improves function in several parts of the brain, such as the right caudate nucleus of the basal ganglia, left ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (VLPFC), and superior temporal gyrus.

In addition to pharmacological treatment, non-pharmacological interventions that leverage neuroplasticity have been proposed as potential approaches for managing ADHD symptoms. Cognitive training and other behavioral therapies aim to improve attention, self-regulation, and impulse control by promoting functional and structural changes in neural circuits associated with executive function. Computerized cognitive training programs have been shown to target underdeveloped neural networks in individuals with ADHD, leading to improvements in attention and working memory through repeated stimulation of specific brain regions. These interventions may produce longer-term neuroplastic changes that overlap with brain areas affected by stimulant medications, suggesting that neuroplasticity-based therapies could complement or, in some cases, reduce reliance on pharmacological treatment.

In early child development

Neuroplasticity is most active in childhood as a part of normal human development, and can also be seen as an especially important mechanism for children in terms of risk and resiliency. Trauma is considered a great risk as it negatively affects many areas of the brain and puts a strain on the sympathetic nervous system from constant activation. Trauma thus alters the brain's connections such that children who have experienced trauma may be hyper vigilant or overly aroused. However, a child's brain can cope with these adverse effects through the actions of neuroplasticity.

Neuroplasticity is shown in four different categories in children and covering a wide variety of neuronal functioning. These four types include impaired, excessive, adaptive, and plasticity.

There are many examples of neuroplasticity in human development. For example, Justine Ker and Stephen Nelson looked at the effects of musical training on neuroplasticity, and found that musical training can contribute to experience dependent structural plasticity. This is when changes in the brain occur based on experiences that are unique to an individual. Examples of this are learning multiple languages, playing a sport, doing theatre, etc. A study done by Hyde in 2009, showed that changes in the brain of children could be seen in as little as 15 months of musical training. Ker and Nelson suggest this degree of plasticity in the brains of children can "help provide a form of intervention for children... with developmental disorders and neurological diseases."

In animals

In a single lifespan, individuals of an animal species may encounter various changes in brain morphology. Many of these differences are caused by the release of hormones in the brain; others are the product of evolutionary factors or developmental stages. Some changes occur seasonally in species to enhance or generate response behaviors.

Seasonal brain changes

Changing brain behavior and morphology to suit other seasonal behaviors is relatively common in animals. These changes can improve the chances of mating during breeding season. Examples of seasonal brain morphology change can be found within many classes and species.

Within the class Aves, black-capped chickadees experience an increase in the volume of their hippocampus and strength of neural connections to the hippocampus during fall months. These morphological changes within the hippocampus which are related to spatial memory are not limited to birds, as they can also be observed in rodents and amphibians. In songbirds, many song control nuclei in the brain increase in size during mating season. Among birds, changes in brain morphology to influence song patterns, frequency, and volume are common. Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) immunoreactivity, or the reception of the hormone, is lowered in European starlings exposed to longer periods of light during the day.

The California sea hare, a gastropod, has more successful inhibition of egg-laying hormones outside of mating season due to increased effectiveness of inhibitors in the brain. Changes to the inhibitory nature of regions of the brain can also be found in humans and other mammals. In the amphibian Bufo japonicus, part of the amygdala is larger before breeding and during hibernation than it is after breeding.

Seasonal brain variation occurs within many mammals. Part of the hypothalamus of the common ewe is more receptive to GnRH during breeding season than at other times of the year. Humans experience a change in the "size of the hypothalamic suprachiasmatic nucleus and vasopressin-immunoreactive neurons within it" during the fall, when these parts are larger. In the spring, both reduce in size.

Traumatic brain injury research

A group of scientists found that if a small stroke (an infarction) is induced by obstruction of blood flow to a portion of a monkey's motor cortex, the part of the body that responds by movement moves when areas adjacent to the damaged brain area are stimulated. In one study, intracortical microstimulation (ICMS) mapping techniques were used in nine normal monkeys. Some underwent ischemic-infarction procedures and the others, ICMS procedures. The monkeys with ischemic infarctions retained more finger flexion during food retrieval and after several months this deficit returned to preoperative levels. With respect to the distal forelimb representation, "postinfarction mapping procedures revealed that movement representations underwent reorganization throughout the adjacent, undamaged cortex." Understanding of interaction between the damaged and undamaged areas provides a basis for better treatment plans in stroke patients. Current research includes the tracking of changes that occur in the motor areas of the cerebral cortex as a result of a stroke. Thus, events that occur in the reorganization process of the brain can be ascertained. The treatment plans that may enhance recovery from strokes, such as physiotherapy, pharmacotherapy, and electrical-stimulation therapy, are also being studied.

Jon Kaas, a professor at Vanderbilt University, has been able to show "how somatosensory area 3b and ventroposterior (VP) nucleus of the thalamus are affected by longstanding unilateral dorsal-column lesions at cervical levels in macaque monkeys." Adult brains have the ability to change as a result of injury but the extent of the reorganization depends on the extent of the injury. His recent research focuses on the somatosensory system, which involves a sense of the body and its movements using many senses. Usually, damage of the somatosensory cortex results in impairment of the body perception. Kaas' research project is focused on how these systems (somatosensory, cognitive, motor systems) respond with plastic changes resulting from injury.

One recent study of neuroplasticity involves work done by a team of doctors and researchers at Emory University, specifically Donald Stein and David Wright. This is the first treatment in 40 years that has significant results in treating traumatic brain injuries while also incurring no known side effects and being cheap to administer. Stein noticed that female mice seemed to recover from brain injuries better than male mice, and that at certain points in the estrus cycle, females recovered even better. This difference may be attributed to different levels of progesterone, with higher levels of progesterone leading to the faster recovery from brain injury in mice. However, clinical trials showed progesterone offers no significant benefit for traumatic brain injury in human patients.

Aging

Transcriptional profiling of the frontal cortex of persons ranging from 26 to 106 years of age defined a set of genes with reduced expression after age 40, and especially after age 70. Genes that play central roles in synaptic plasticity were the most significantly affected by age, generally showing reduced expression over time. There was also a marked increase in cortical DNA damage, likely oxidative DNA damage, in gene promoters with aging.

Reactive oxygen species appear to have a significant role in the regulation of synaptic plasticity and cognitive function. However age-related increases in reactive oxygen species may also lead to impairments in these functions.

Multilingualism

There is a beneficial effect of multilingualism on people's behavior and cognition. Numerous studies have shown that people who study more than one language have better cognitive functions and flexibilities than people who only speak one language. Bilinguals are found to have longer attention spans, stronger organization and analyzation skills, and a better theory of mind than monolinguals. Researchers have found that the effect of multilingualism on better cognition is due to neuroplasticity.

In one prominent study, neurolinguists used a voxel-based morphometry (VBM) method to visualize the structural plasticity of brains in healthy monolinguals and bilinguals. They first investigated the differences in density of grey and white matter between two groups and found the relationship between brain structure and age of language acquisition. The results showed that grey-matter density in the inferior parietal cortex for multilinguals were significantly greater than monolinguals. The researchers also found that early bilinguals had a greater density of grey matter relative to late bilinguals in the same region. The inferior parietal cortex is a brain region highly associated with the language learning, which corresponds to the VBM result of the study.

Recent studies have also found that learning multiple languages not only re-structures the brain but also boosts brain's capacity for plasticity. A recent study found that multilingualism not only affects the grey matter but also white matter of the brain. White matter is made up of myelinated axons that is greatly associated with learning and communication. Neurolinguists used a diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) scanning method to determine the white matter intensity between monolinguals and bilinguals. Increased myelinations in white matter tracts were found in bilingual individuals who actively used both languages in everyday life. The demand of handling more than one language requires more efficient connectivity within the brain, which resulted in greater white matter density for multilinguals.

While it is still debated whether these changes in brain are result of genetic disposition or environmental demands, many evidences suggest that environmental, social experience in early multilinguals affect the structural and functional reorganization in the brain.

Novel treatments of depression

Historically, the monoamine imbalance hypothesis of depression played a dominant role in psychiatry and drug development. However, while traditional antidepressants cause a quick increase in noradrenaline, serotonin, or dopamine, there is a significant delay in their clinical effect and often an inadequate treatment response. As neuroscientists pursued this avenue of research, clinical and preclinical data across multiple modalities began to converge on pathways involved in neuroplasticity. They found a strong inverse relationship between the number of synapses and severity of depression symptoms and discovered that in addition to their neurotransmitter effect, traditional antidepressants improved neuroplasticity but over a significantly protracted time course of weeks or months. The search for faster acting antidepressants found success in the pursuit of ketamine, a well-known anesthetic agent, that was found to have potent anti-depressant effects after a single infusion due to its capacity to rapidly increase the number of dendritic spines and to restore aspects of functional connectivity. Additional neuroplasticity promoting compounds with therapeutic effects that were both rapid and enduring have been identified through classes of compounds including serotonergic psychedelics, cholinergic scopolamine, and other novel compounds. To differentiate between traditional antidepressants focused on monoamine modulation and this new category of fast acting antidepressants that achieve therapeutic effects through neuroplasticity, the term psychoplastogen was introduced.

Nicotine

Nicotine affects the brain by binding to nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, the same receptors acetylcholine binds to, which has been linked with Neuroplasticity. Nicotine use may lower the rate of neuroplasticity in the brain by damaging the nicotinic-acetylcholine receptors needed to reuptake the acetylcholine necessary for neuroplasticity.

References

References

  1. Costandi, Moheb. (19 August 2016). "Neuroplasticity". MIT Press.
  2. Grafman, Jordan. (July 1, 2000). "Conceptualizing functional neuroplasticity". Journal of Communication Disorders.
  3. (February 2024). "Women's neuroplasticity during gestation, childbirth and postpartum". Nature Neuroscience.
  4. (January 2010). "Structural plasticity and hippocampal function". Annual Review of Psychology.
  5. (2013). "Neurological Rehabilitation". Elsevier Inc. Chapters.
  6. (July 2012). "Re-opening Windows: Manipulating Critical Periods for Brain Development". Cerebrum.
  7. (October 2013). "Activity-dependent neural plasticity from bench to bedside". Neuron.
  8. (2 May 2019). "Finding the Intersection of Neuroplasticity, Stroke Recovery, and Learning: Scope and Contributions to Stroke Rehabilitation". Neural Plasticity.
  9. (2010-12-01). "Neural Plasticity: The Biological Substrate For Neurorehabilitation". PM&R.
  10. (1996). "Aspects of the search for neural mechanisms of memory". Annual Review of Psychology.
  11. (2014). "Adult neuroplasticity: more than 40 years of research". Neural Plasticity.
  12. (November 2002). "Santiago Ramón y Cajal's concept of neuronal plasticity: the ambiguity lives on". Trends in Neurosciences.
  13. Abraham, Tara H.. (December 2002). "(Physio)logical circuits: The intellectual origins of the McCulloch–Pitts neural networks". Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences.
  14. (1943-12-01). "A logical calculus of the ideas immanent in nervous activity". The Bulletin of Mathematical Biophysics.
  15. (1896). "Some preliminary experiments on vision without inversion of the retinal image". Psychological Review.
  16. (August 1964). "The effects of an enriched environment on the histology of the rat cerebral cortex". The Journal of Comparative Neurology.
  17. (October 1964). "Chemical and Anatomical Plasticity of Brain". Science.
  18. ''Brain Science Podcast'' Episode #10, "Neuroplasticity"
  19. Gefter, Amanda. (June 17, 2025). "Finding Peter Putnam".
  20. (October 30, 1970). "Outline of a Functional Model of the Nervous System, Putnam/Fuller 1964".
  21. "Wired Science . Video: Mixed Feelings". PBS.
  22. "Shepherd Ivory Franz". Rkthomas.myweb.uga.edu.
  23. (June 2002). "Shepherd Ivory Franz: his contributions to neuropsychology and rehabilitation". Cognitive, Affective & Behavioral Neuroscience.
  24. (September 1997). "Recalling routes around london: activation of the right hippocampus in taxi drivers". The Journal of Neuroscience.
  25. (December 2011). "Acquiring "the Knowledge" of London's layout drives structural brain changes". Current Biology.
  26. (April 2000). "Navigation-related structural change in the hippocampi of taxi drivers". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
  27. (2016-06-02). "2016 Kavli Prize in Neuroscience".
  28. Gulyaeva, N. V.. (March 2017). "Molecular mechanisms of neuroplasticity: An expanding universe". Biochemistry (Moscow).
  29. (2007). "Focusing effect of acetylcholine on neuroplasticity in the human motor cortex". The Journal of Neuroscience.
  30. (October 1992). "Neuronal plasticity as an adaptive property of the central nervous system". Annals of Anatomy - Anatomischer Anzeiger.
  31. (2023). "StatPearls". StatPearls Publishing.
  32. (2014). "Reorganization and plastic changes of the human brain associated with skill learning and expertise". Frontiers in Human Neuroscience.
  33. Grafman, Jordan. (2000). "Conceptualizing functional neuroplasticity". Journal of Communication Disorders.
  34. (2016-01-15). "Structural and functional neuroplasticity in human learning of spatial routes". NeuroImage.
  35. (March 1985). "Promoting functional plasticity in the damaged nervous system". Science.
  36. (October 2015). "The Benefits of Exercise on Structural and Functional Plasticity in the Rodent Hippocampus of Different Disease Models". Brain Plasticity.
  37. (April 2021). "Physiology of Cerebellar Reserve: Redundancy and Plasticity of a Modular Machine". International Journal of Molecular Sciences.
  38. (November 2003). "The other side of the engram: experience-driven changes in neuronal intrinsic excitability". Nature Reviews. Neuroscience.
  39. (February 2019). "Plasticity of intrinsic neuronal excitability". Current Opinion in Neurobiology.
  40. (2013). "Learning intrinsic excitability in medium spiny neurons". F1000Research.
  41. (January 2020). "SK2 channels in cerebellar Purkinje cells contribute to excitability modulation in motor-learning-specific memory traces". PLOS Biology.
  42. (2018). "Functional and Structural Plasticity of Brain in Elite Karate Athletes". Journal of Healthcare Engineering.
  43. (March 2014). "Strengthening connections: functional connectivity and brain plasticity". Neuropsychology Review.
  44. (2021). "Requirement to change of functional brain network across the lifespan". PLOS ONE.
  45. (2014-08-22). "A new case of complete primary cerebellar agenesis: clinical and imaging findings in a living patient". Brain.
  46. (January 2022). "An assessment of the existence of adult neurogenesis in humans and value of its rodent models for neuropsychiatric diseases". Molecular Psychiatry.
  47. (November 2018). "Plasticity and redundancy in the integration of adult born neurons in the hippocampus". Neurobiology of Learning and Memory.
  48. (January 2011). "Neuroplasticity and its applications for rehabilitation". American Journal of Therapeutics.
  49. [https://web.archive.org/web/20060626124922/http://www.whsc.emory.edu/press_releases_video.cfm?id=brain_trauma Traumatic Brain Injury] (a story of TBI and the results of ProTECT using progesterone treatments) Emory University News Archives
  50. (October 2005). "Tapered progesterone withdrawal enhances behavioral and molecular recovery after traumatic brain injury". Experimental Neurology.
  51. "Progesterone offers no significant benefit in traumatic brain injury clinical trial". Emory University.
  52. (January 2009). "Neuroplasticity: Teaching an old brain new tricks.". Review of Optometry.
  53. (27 December 2012). "Recovery of stereopsis in adults through training in a virtual reality task". Journal of Vision.
  54. (February 2013). "New insights into amblyopia: binocular therapy and noninvasive brain stimulation". Journal of AAPOS.
  55. (February 2011). "Decreasing phantom limb pain through observation of action and imagery: a case series". Pain Medicine.
  56. (June 1995). "Phantom-limb pain as a perceptual correlate of cortical reorganization following arm amputation". Nature.
  57. (May 2003). "Cortical reorganisation and chronic pain: implications for rehabilitation". Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine.
  58. (November 2009). "Interdependence of movement and anatomy persists when amputees learn a physiologically impossible movement of their phantom limb". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
  59. (October 2011). "Functional and structural imaging of pain-induced neuroplasticity". Current Opinion in Anesthesiology.
  60. (December 2003). "Patterns of cortical reorganization in complex regional pain syndrome". Neurology.
  61. (November 2004). "Chronic back pain is associated with decreased prefrontal and thalamic gray matter density". The Journal of Neuroscience.
  62. (May 2001). "Reorganization of motor and somatosensory cortex in upper extremity amputees with phantom limb pain". The Journal of Neuroscience.
  63. (March 1997). "Extensive reorganization of primary somatosensory cortex in chronic back pain patients". Neuroscience Letters.
  64. (June 2006). "Somatosensory cortical plasticity in carpal tunnel syndrome--a cross-sectional fMRI evaluation". NeuroImage.
  65. (November 2018). "Harnessing neuroplasticity: modern approaches and clinical future". The International Journal of Neuroscience.
  66. (October 2007). "Age effects on gray matter volume and attentional performance in Zen meditation". Neurobiology of Aging.
  67. (January 2009). "Long-term meditation is associated with increased gray matter density in the brain stem". NeuroReport.
  68. (April 2009). "The underlying anatomical correlates of long-term meditation: larger hippocampal and frontal volumes of gray matter". NeuroImage.
  69. (November 2005). "Meditation experience is associated with increased cortical thickness". NeuroReport.
  70. (November 2004). "Long-term meditators self-induce high-amplitude gamma synchrony during mental practice". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
  71. (January 2008). "Buddha's Brain: Neuroplasticity and Meditation". IEEE Signal Processing Magazine.
  72. (2013). "Sculpting the Intrinsic Modular Organization of Spontaneous Brain Activity by Art". PLOS ONE.
  73. Patel, Aniruddh D.. (July 2003). "Language, music, syntax and the brain". Nature Neuroscience.
  74. (2013-06-26). "Sculpting the Intrinsic Modular Organization of Spontaneous Brain Activity by Art". PLOS ONE.
  75. Zaidel, Dahlia W. (February 2010). "Art and brain: insights from neuropsychology, biology and evolution". Journal of Anatomy.
  76. (2013). "Plasticity in the sensorimotor cortex induced by Music-supported therapy in stroke patients: a TMS study". Frontiers in Human Neuroscience.
  77. (June 2023). "Music interventions in 132 healthy older adults enhance cerebellar grey matter and auditory working memory, despite general brain atrophy". Neuroimage: Reports.
  78. (2019-06-25). "Neuroplastic Effects in Patients With Traumatic Brain Injury After Music-Supported Therapy". Frontiers in Human Neuroscience.
  79. (February 2024). "The transformative power of music: Insights into neuroplasticity, health, and disease". Brain, Behavior, & Immunity - Health.
  80. (January 2014). "Cerebral hemodynamics of the aging brain: risk of Alzheimer disease and benefit of aerobic exercise". Frontiers in Physiology.
  81. (January 2015). "A meta-analytic review of the effects of exercise on brain-derived neurotrophic factor". Journal of Psychiatric Research.
  82. (October 2013). "Effect of aerobic exercise on cognition, academic achievement, and psychosocial function in children: a systematic review of randomized control trials". Preventing Chronic Disease.
  83. (2014). "Physical activity and cognitive function in individuals over 60 years of age: a systematic review". Clinical Interventions in Aging.
  84. (February 2013). "Benefits of regular aerobic exercise for executive functioning in healthy populations". Psychonomic Bulletin & Review.
  85. (2014). "Cognitive control in the self-regulation of physical activity and sedentary behavior". Frontiers in Human Neuroscience.
  86. (July 2012). "Altered cross-modal processing in the primary auditory cortex of congenitally deaf adults: a visual-somatosensory fMRI study with a double-flash illusion". The Journal of Neuroscience.
  87. (July 2014). "Visual change detection recruits auditory cortices in early deafness". NeuroImage.
  88. (November 2001). "Impact of early deafness and early exposure to sign language on the cerebral organization for motion processing". The Journal of Neuroscience.
  89. (March 1987). "Attention to central and peripheral visual space in a movement detection task: an event-related potential and behavioral study. II. Congenitally deaf adults". Brain Research.
  90. (November 2002). "Auditory deprivation affects processing of motion, but not color". Brain Research. Cognitive Brain Research.
  91. (January 1998). "Differences in visual search tasks between congenitally deaf and normally hearing adults". Brain Research. Cognitive Brain Research.
  92. (April 2014). "Response speed advantage for vision does not extend to touch in early deaf adults". Experimental Brain Research.
  93. (2015). "Visuo-tactile interactions in the congenitally deaf: a behavioral and event-related potential study". Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience.
  94. (2014). "Enhanced peripheral visual processing in congenitally deaf humans is supported by multiple brain regions, including primary auditory cortex". Frontiers in Human Neuroscience.
  95. (November 2006). "Do deaf individuals see better?". Trends in Cognitive Sciences.
  96. (March 2001). "Feeling vibrations: enhanced tactile sensitivity in congenitally deaf humans". Neuroscience Letters.
  97. (May 2007). "Vibrotactile activation of the auditory cortices in deaf versus hearing adults". NeuroReport.
  98. (February 2012). "Developmental neuroplasticity after cochlear implantation". Trends in Neurosciences.
  99. (October 2010). "Profound deafness in childhood". The New England Journal of Medicine.
  100. (July 2016). "Auditory motion in the sighted and blind: Early visual deprivation triggers a large-scale imbalance between auditory and "visual" brain regions". NeuroImage.
  101. (May 2017). "Auditory and proprioceptive spatial impairments in blind children and adults". Developmental Science.
  102. (June 2016). "Early visual deprivation severely compromises the auditory sense of space in congenitally blind children". Developmental Psychology.
  103. (13 August 2010). "Human Echolocation I". Journal of Vision.
  104. (February 2013). "Meta-analysis of functional magnetic resonance imaging studies of inhibition and attention in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder: exploring task-specific, stimulant medication, and age effects". JAMA Psychiatry.
  105. (September 2013). "Effect of psychostimulants on brain structure and function in ADHD: a qualitative literature review of magnetic resonance imaging-based neuroimaging studies". The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry.
  106. (February 2012). "Meta-analysis of structural MRI studies in children and adults with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder indicates treatment effects". Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica.
  107. (October 2019). "Methylphenidate and atomoxetine normalise fronto-parietal underactivation during sustained attention in ADHD adolescents". European Neuropsychopharmacology.
  108. Hoekzema, Elseline; Carmona, Susanna; Ramos‐Quiroga, J Antoni; Barba, Erika; Bielsa, Anna; Tremols, Virginia; Rovira, Mariana; Soliva, Juan Carlos; Casas, Miguel; Bulbena, Antoni; Tobeña, Adolf; Vilarroya, Oscar [https://online-journals.org/index.php/i-jep/article/view/10285], Training‐induced neuroanatomical plasticity in ADHD: A tensor‐based morphometric study
  109. (May 2011). "Resilience in children threatened by extreme adversity: frameworks for research, practice, and translational synergy". Development and Psychopathology.
  110. (2001). "The effects of early relational trauma on right brain development, affect regulation, and infant mental health". Infant Mental Health Journal.
  111. (2011). "Gene Expression to Neurobiology and Behavior: Human Brain Development and Developmental Disorders".
  112. (October 2005). "Neuroplasticity in children". Indian Journal of Pediatrics.
  113. (March 2009). "Musical training shapes structural brain development". The Journal of Neuroscience.
  114. (June 2019). "The effects of musical training on brain plasticity and cognitive processes.". Journal of Neurology, Psychiatry and Brain Research.
  115. (November 1994). "Seasonal recruitment of hippocampal neurons in adult free-ranging black-capped chickadees". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
  116. (May 1995). "Seasonal variation in hippocampal volume in a food-storing bird, the black-capped chickadee". Journal of Neurobiology.
  117. (September 1996). "Seasonal plasticity in the song nuclei of wild rufous-sided towhees". Brain Research.
  118. (June 2000). "Seasonal plasticity in the adult brain". Trends in Neurosciences.
  119. "Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering: BME Faculty". Bme.gatech.edu.
  120. (2014-12-10). "Progesterone offers no significant benefit in traumatic brain injury clinical trial".
  121. (May 2011). "Reactive oxygen species in the regulation of synaptic plasticity and memory". Antioxidants & Redox Signaling.
  122. (October 2004). "Neurolinguistics: structural plasticity in the bilingual brain". Nature.
  123. (February 2015). "The effects of bilingualism on the white matter structure of the brain". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
  124. (January 2004). "Neuroplasticity: changes in grey matter induced by training". Nature.
  125. (August 2002). "Anatomical correlates of learning novel speech sounds". Neuron.
  126. (2010). "Depression research: where are we now?". Molecular Brain.
  127. (2010). "The Timing of Antidepressant Effects: A Comparison of Diverse Pharmacological and Somatic Treatments". Pharmaceuticals (Basel, Switzerland).
  128. (2008). "Stress, Depression, and Neuroplasticity: A Convergence of Mechanisms". Neuropsychopharmacology.
  129. (2019). "Lower synaptic density is associated with depression severity and network alterations". Nature Communications.
  130. (August 5, 2021). "Neuroplasticity and depression: Rewiring the brain's networks through pharmacological therapy". Experimental and Therapeutic Medicine.
  131. (2015). "Spine synapse remodeling in the pathophysiology and treatment of depression". Neuroscience Letters.
  132. (2018). "Psychedelics Promote Structural and Functional Neural Plasticity". Cell Reports.
  133. (2007-12-26). "Focusing effect of acetylcholine on neuroplasticity in the human motor cortex". The Journal of Neuroscience.
  134. (2012). "Rapid effect of nicotine intake on neuroplasticity in non-smoking humans". Frontiers in Pharmacology.
  135. (October 2011). "Characterizing brain cortical plasticity and network dynamics across the age-span in health and disease with TMS-EEG and TMS-fMRI". Brain Topography.
  136. (2014). "Adult neuroplasticity: more than 40 years of research". Neural Plasticity.
  137. (April 2012). "Social influences on neuroplasticity: stress and interventions to promote well-being". Nature Neuroscience.
  138. (July 2010). "Culture Wires the Brain: A Cognitive Neuroscience Perspective". Perspectives on Psychological Science.
  139. (26 July 2016). "Neuroplasticity and Clinical Practice: Building Brain Power for Health". Frontiers in Psychology.
  140. (April 2018). "Redefining neuroendocrinology: Epigenetics of brain-body communication over the life course". Frontiers in Neuroendocrinology.
  141. (2001). "Toward a theory of neuroplasticity". Psychology Press.
  142. (1890). "The Principles of Psychology".
  143. (2002). "Synaptic self: how our brains become who we are". Viking.
  144. (January 2002). "Neurogenesis in adult primate neocortex: an evaluation of the evidence". Nature Reviews. Neuroscience.
  145. (June 2008). "Genesis of neuronal and glial progenitors in the cerebellar cortex of peripuberal and adult rabbits". PLOS ONE.
  146. (September 2002). "Human brain plasticity: an emerging view of the multiple substrates and mechanisms that cause cortical changes and related sensory dysfunctions after injuries of sensory inputs from the body". Brain Research. Brain Research Reviews.
  147. (2007). "The Brain That Changes Itself: Stories of Personal Triumph from the frontiers of brain science". Viking.
  148. (1966). "Brain mechanisms in conditioning and learning". Neurosciences Research Program Bulletin.
  149. (25 April 2007). "Train Your Brain". Slate.
  150. (2019). "The Impact of Studying Brain Plasticity". Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience.
  151. (2021-02-11). "Brain Dynamics: The brain activity according to the dynamic conditions of nervous excitability. Volume 1".
  152. Stein, Donald. "Plasticity." Personal interview. Alyssa Walz. 19 November 2008.
  153. (February 2012). "The aging hippocampus: interactions between exercise, depression, and BDNF". The Neuroscientist.
  154. (2013). "Comprehensive Physiology".
  155. (September 2014). "Physical activity, fitness, and gray matter volume". Neurobiology of Aging.
  156. (2011). "Neural correlates of natural human echolocation in early and late blind echolocation experts". PLOS ONE.
  157. (March 1997). "Immunocytochemical localization of GnRH precursor in the hypothalamus of European starlings during sexual maturation and photorefractoriness". Journal of Neuroendocrinology.
  158. (August 1993). "Ultrastructural evidence for changes in synaptic input to the hypothalamic luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone neurons in photosensitive and photorefractory starlings". Journal of Neuroendocrinology.
  159. (March 1998). "Seasonal fluctuations in the secretory response of neuroendocrine cells of Aplysia californica to inhibitors of protein kinase A and protein kinase C". General and Comparative Endocrinology.
  160. (May 1992). "Seasonal changes in the suprachiasmatic nucleus of man". Neuroscience Letters.
  161. (December 1981). "A brain for all seasons: cyclical anatomical changes in song control nuclei of the canary brain". Science.
  162. (February 1984). "The volume of the toad medial amygdala-anterior preoptic complex is sexually dimorphic and seasonally variable". Neuroscience Letters.
  163. (March 1997). "Evidence for seasonal plasticity in the gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) system of the ewe: changes in synaptic inputs onto GnRH neurons". Endocrinology.
  164. (June 2003). "Reorganization of remote cortical regions after ischemic brain injury: a potential substrate for stroke recovery". Journal of Neurophysiology.
  165. (October 2008). "Large-scale reorganization in the somatosensory cortex and thalamus after sensory loss in macaque monkeys". The Journal of Neuroscience.
  166. (June 2004). "Gene regulation and DNA damage in the ageing human brain". Nature.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Neuroplasticity — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report