The brain as a self-organizing system
- 1 January 1986
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Springer Nature in Archiv Fur Psychiatrie Und Nervenkrankheiten
- Vol. 236 (1) , 4-9
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00641050
Abstract
Clinical evidence and numerous results from animal experimentation indicate that cognitive functions have to be learned. Brain structures subserving these functions require sensory experience for their maturation. Genetic instructions are in principle not sufficient to specify neuronal connections with sufficient precision. Self-organization processes are implemented in addition which allow to optimize genetically determined blue prints of connectivity by making use of functional criteria. Thus, neuronal activity becomes an important shaping factor in the development of the structural and functional architecture of the forebrain. To the extent that this neuronal activity is modulated by sensory signals, environmental factors can influence the development of neuronal networks. Recent experiments indicate that these shaping processes are additionally controlled by modulatory systems. Both, the noradrenergic projection from the locus coeruleus and the cholinergic projection from the basal forebrain facilitate activity-dependent long-term changes of neuronal connections during development. The activity of these modulatory systems in turn depends on central states such as arousal, attention, and perhaps also motivation. It is inferred from this evidence that experience-dependent self-organization should not be considered as a passive imprinting process but rather as an active dialogue between the brain and its environment. The hypothesis is discussed that many developmental disturbances which are commonly attributed to deprivation are in fact due to defaults of the CNS which either lead to the formulation of wrong questions or to the reduction of exploratory drive.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Recovery of orientation selectivity in kitten primary visual cortex is slowed down by bilateral section of ophthalmic trigeminal afferentsDevelopmental Brain Research, 1981
- Cortical Plasticity in Monocularly Deprived Immobilized Kittens Depends on Eye MovementScience, 1979
- Requirements for the disruption of binocularity in the visual cortex of strabismic kittensBrain Research, 1979
- Changes in the circuitry of the kitten visual cortex are gated by postsynaptic activityNature, 1979
- Evidence for Separable Binocular Processes Differentially Affected by Artificially Induced AnisometropiaOptometry and Vision Science, 1979
- Ocular motility and recovery of orientational properties of visual cortical neurones in dark-reared kittensNature, 1978
- The effect of monocular exposure to temporal contrasts on ocular dominance in kittensBrain Research, 1977
- Instability of the eye in the dark and proprioceptionNature, 1977
- Development of cat visual cortex following rotation of one eyeNature, 1975
- Experimental analysis of amblyopia and strabismus.British Journal of Ophthalmology, 1974