ELSC Seminar Series
Home » ELSC Seminar Series » Synaptic Plasticity: The Brain’s Response to Experience
Prof. Robert Malenka
Synaptic Plasticity: The Brain's Response to Experience
One of the most fascinating and important properties of the mammalian brain is its plasticity: the ability of an experience, whether it be a stressful event or ingestion of a drug, to modify the functioning of the brain’s complex neural circuits and thereby modify subsequent thoughts, feelings and behavior. Experience-dependent brain plasticity is in large part due to long-lasting, activity-dependent changes in the strength of communication at excitatory synapses. The most well understood forms of such synaptic plasticity, termed long-term potentiation (LTP) and long-term depression (LTD), play important roles in several forms of adaptive learning and memory. After reviewing the basic properties of these intriguing cellular phenomena, I will review evidence demonstrating that drugs of abuse elicit synaptic plasticity in key cells of the brain’s reward circuitry and how these findings led to a more sophisticated understanding of the brain’s circuits that mediate reward and aversion.
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