INJURY‐ AND USE‐RELATED PLASTICITY IN THE PRIMARY SENSORY CORTEX OF ADULT MAMMALS: POSSIBLE RELATIONSHIP TO PERCEPTUAL LEARNING
- 1 November 1996
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology
- Vol. 23 (10-11) , 939-947
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1440-1681.1996.tb01146.x
Abstract
1. Restricted cochlear lesions in adult animals result in a reorganization of auditory cortex such that the cortical region deprived of its normal input by the lesion is occupied by expanded representations of adjacent cochlear loci (and thus of the frequencies represented at those loci). Analogous injury-induced reorganization is seen in somatosensory, visual and motor cortices of adult animals after restricted peripheral lesions. 2. Rather than constituting a central compensation for the peripheral loss, such reorganization appears to be an extreme form of changes in cortical organization that occur as a consequence of altered patterns of input such as arise from differential use of restricted regions of receptor surfaces ('use-related' reorganization). Thus, the frequency organization of auditory cortex is modified in animals trained to perform a frequency discrimination task and analogous changes in the frequency selectivity of cortical neurons are produced by classical conditioning procedures. 3. Recent evidence from the visual system suggests that changes similar to those involved in injury- and use-related cortical reorganization may underlie some forms of what has been called 'perceptual learning', the improvement in sensory/ perceptual discriminative performance with practice. Some forms of such learning are highly specific to the particular stimuli used in training (i.e. do not generalize to other stimuli), suggesting that the improved performance reflects a change in neural circuitry at a relatively early level of sensory processing. The limited available evidence supports the occurrence of such learning in the auditory system. 4. Recent studies using functional imaging and related techniques indicate that injury- and use-related reorganization occurs in human sensory and motor cortex.Keywords
This publication has 49 references indexed in Scilit:
- Functional MRI evidence for adult motor cortex plasticity during motor skill learningNature, 1995
- Phantom-limb pain as a perceptual correlate of cortical reorganization following arm amputationNature, 1995
- Dynamic Regulation of Receptive Fields and Maps in the Adult Sensory CortexAnnual Review of Neuroscience, 1995
- Effect of unilateral partial cochlear lesions in adult cats on the representation of lesioned and unlesioned cochleas in primary auditory cortexJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1993
- Plasticity of auditory cortex associated with sensorineural hearing loss in adult C57BL/6J miceJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1993
- Receptive field dynamics in adult primary visual cortexNature, 1992
- Immediate Expansion of Receptive Fields of Neurons in Area 3b of Macaque Monkeys after Digit DenervationSomatosensory & Motor Research, 1991
- Reorganization of Retinotopic Cortical Maps in Adult Mammals After Lesions of the RetinaScience, 1990
- Reorganization of raccoon somatosensory cortex following removal of the fifth digitJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1982
- Improvement in perceptual judgments as a function of controlled practice or training.Psychological Bulletin, 1953