research published 2014-09-01 · by Bryan Kolb

Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior · 2014 Sep

Abstract

An important development in behavioral neuroscience in the past 25 years has been the demonstration that the brain is far more flexible in structure and function than was previously believed. Studies of laboratory animals have provided an important tool for understanding the nature of brain plasticity and behavior at many levels ranging from detailed behavioral paradigms, electrophysiology, neuronal morphology, protein chemistry, and epigenetics. Here we seek a synthesis of the multidisciplinary work on brain plasticity and behavior to identify some general principles on how the brain changes in response to a wide range of experiences over the lifetime.

Neurotransmitters

None linked yet.

Related

Community votes: 0

Ratings (0): Breadth — · Depth — · Enjoyment — · Usefulness —

Community

Log in to rate and share your notes.

No contributions yet.