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Is heterosynaptic modulation essential for stabilizing Hebbian plasticity and memory?
- Publication Year :
- 2000
-
Abstract
- In 1894, Ramón y Cajal first proposed that memory is stored as an anatomical change in the strength of neuronal connections. For the following 60 years, little evidence was recruited in support of this idea. This situation changed in the middle of the twentieth century with the development of cellular techniques for the study of synaptic connections and the emergence of new formulations of synaptic plasticity that redefined Ramón y Cajal's idea, making it more suitable for testing. These formulations defined two categories of plasticity, referred to as homosynaptic or Hebbian activity-dependent, and heterosynaptic or modulatory input-dependent. Here we suggest that Hebbian mechanisms are used primarily for learning and for short-term memory but often cannot, by themselves, recruit the events required to maintain a long-term memory. In contrast, heterosynaptic plasticity commonly recruits long-term memory mechanisms that lead to transcription and to synpatic growth. When jointly recruited, homosynaptic mechanisms assure that learning is effectively established and heterosynaptic mechanisms ensure that memory is maintained.
- Subjects :
- Neurotransmitter Agents
Neuronal Plasticity
Synaptic scaling
Homosynaptic plasticity
General Neuroscience
Conditioning, Classical
Long-Term Potentiation
Heterosynaptic plasticity
Hippocampus
Synaptic Transmission
Hebbian theory
Memory
Aplysia
Synaptic plasticity
Metaplasticity
Animals
Humans
Psychology
Neuroscience
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....c6ac1ba0f973c33f00843965885e9860