Close
Help
Need Help?





JOURNAL

Journal of Experimental Neuroscience

Synaptic Mechanisms of Activity-Dependent Remodeling in Visual Cortex During Monocular Deprivation

Submit a Paper


Journal of Experimental Neuroscience 2009:2 23-41

Review

Published on 08 Jul 2009


Further metadata provided in PDF



Sign up for Email Alerts and keep in touch with Journal of Experimental Neuroscience journal news, updates, events and articles

Cynthia D. Rittenhouse and  Ania K Majewska

Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY.  

Abstract

It has long been appreciated that in the visual cortex, particularly within a postnatal critical period for experience-dependent plasticity, the closure of one eye results in a shift in the responsiveness of cortical cells toward the experienced eye. While the functional aspects of this ocular dominance shift have been studied for many decades, their cortical substrates and synaptic mechanisms remain elusive. Nonetheless, it is becoming increasingly clear that ocular dominance plasticity is a complex phenomenon that appears to have an early and a late component. Early during monocular deprivation, deprived eye cortical synapses depress, while later during the deprivation open eye synapses potentiate. Here we review current literature on the cortical mechanisms of activity-dependent plasticity in the visual system during the critical period. These studies shed light on the role of activity in shaping neuronal structure and function in general and can lead to insights regarding how learning is acquired and maintained at the neuronal level during normal and pathological brain development.


Downloads

PDF  (1.63 MB PDF FORMAT)

RIS citation   (ENDNOTE, REFERENCE MANAGER, PROCITE, REFWORKS)

BibTex citation   (BIBDESK, LATEX)


Sharing


What Your Colleagues Say About Journal of Experimental Neuroscience
Working with Journal of Experimental Neuroscience has been a very nice, clear and fast process of publication.
Dr Jose Fernando Maya Vetencourt (Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia, Genoa, Italy)
More Testimonials

Quick Links


New article and journal news notification services
Email Alerts RSS Feeds
Facebook Google+ Twitter
Pinterest Tumblr YouTube