For medical and fundamental reasons, we need to understand adult brain plasticity at several levels: structural, physiological, and behavioral. Historically, brain plasticity has been mostly investigated by weakening or removing sensory inputs. The visual system has been extensively used because diminishing visual inputs, i.e., visual deprivation-induced plasticity, permits more tractable findings. The present review is centered on the reverse strategy, by imposing a novel stimulus, i.e., adaptation-induced plasticity. Adaptation refers to the constant (milliseconds to hours) presentation of a nonoptimal stimulus (adapter) within the receptive field (RF, spatial area that modulates neuronal firing) of the neuron under observation. We specifically focus on how adaptation impacts the tuning of visual neurons with other associated properties. After adaptation, visual cortical neurons respond robustly to the adapter (before adaptation it typically evokes feeble responses) by developing alternate tuning curves that outlast the adaptation time. Here, with dendritic structure as foundation, we synthesize a of development and acquisition of novel tuning curves following adaptation. We then explain how these changes apply at the global level across different brain regions and species with a short description of underlying neurochemical changes. Finally, we discuss physiopathological consequences and conclude with some gaps and questions that need to be addressed to further comprehend such neuroplasticity.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/jn.00114.2022 | DOI Listing |
J Neurophysiol
October 2024
IMPACT Team of Lyon Neuroscience Research Center, INSERM U1028 CNRS UMR5292, University Claude Bernard Lyon 1, Lyon, France.
Adaptation of reactive saccades (RS), made toward the sudden appearance of stimuli in our environment, is a plastic mechanism thought to occur at the motor level of saccade generation. As saccadic oculomotor commands integrate multisensory information in the parietal cortex and superior colliculus, adaptation of RS should occur not only toward visual but also tactile targets. In addition, saccadic adaptation in one modality (vision or touch) should transfer cross-modally.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMethods Mol Biol
February 2024
Alfred E. Mann Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Hypoxia is a common and critical feature of solid tumors that contributes to the plasticity and heterogeneity of the cancer cells. Cancer cell populations take on a region-specific adaptation induced by hypoxia, and each cancer cell population will show different levels of sensitivity and resistance to cancer therapeutics. Therefore, a faithful recapitulation of tumor hypoxia that allows for accurate assessments of hypoxia-induced adaptations, heterogeneity, and response to therapy is needed to develop new therapeutic approaches.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurophysiol
October 2022
Neurophysiology of Visual System, Departement de Sciences Biologiques, Université de Montréal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
For medical and fundamental reasons, we need to understand adult brain plasticity at several levels: structural, physiological, and behavioral. Historically, brain plasticity has been mostly investigated by weakening or removing sensory inputs. The visual system has been extensively used because diminishing visual inputs, i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeural Plast
July 2020
McGill Vision Research, Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Dichoptic movie viewing has been shown to significantly improve visual acuity in amblyopia in children. Moreover, short-term occlusion of the amblyopic eye can transiently increase its contribution to binocular fusion in adults. In this study, we first asked whether dichoptic movie viewing could improve the visual function of amblyopic subjects beyond the critical period.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuroscience
May 2018
Vision Research Laboratory, Center for Brain Science Research and School of Life Sciences, Fudan University, 2005 Songhu Road, Shanghai 200433, China. Electronic address:
Cortices are non-uniform in their capacity for adaptive changes. In cat area 17, pinwheel centers of the orientation map demonstrated much greater selectivity shifts after the orientation adaptation than the iso-orientation domains (Dragoi et al., 2001a).
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