Long‐term potentiation of human visual evoked responses
- 28 April 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in European Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 21 (7), 2045-2050
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1460-9568.2005.04007.x
Abstract
Long‐term potentiation (LTP) is a candidate synaptic mechanism underlying learning and memory that has been studied extensively at the cellular and molecular level in laboratory animals. To date, LTP has only been directly demonstrated in humans in isolated cortical tissue obtained from patients undergoing surgery, where it displays properties identical to those seen in non‐human preparations. Inquiry into the functional significance of LTP has been hindered by the absence of a human model. Here we give the first demonstration that the rapid repetitive presentation of a visual checkerboard (a photic ‘tetanus’) leads to a persistent enhancement of one of the early components of the visual evoked potential in normal humans. The potentiated response is largest in the hemisphere contralateral to the tetanized visual hemifield and is limited to one component of the visual evoked response (the N1b). The selective potentiation of only the N1b component makes overall brain excitability changes unlikely and suggests that the effect is due instead to an LTP process. While LTP is known to exist in the human brain, the ability to elicit LTP from non‐surgical patients will provide a human model system allowing the detailed examination of synaptic plasticity in normal subjects and may have future clinical applications in the assessment of cognitive disorders.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dynamic Brain Sources of Visual Evoked ResponsesScience, 2002
- Long-Term Potentiation--A Decade of Progress?Science, 1999
- Perception of the Mccollough Effect Correlates with Activity in Extrastriate Cortex: A Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging StudyPsychological Science, 1999
- Dealing with artifacts: The EOG contamination of the event-related brain potentialBehavior Research Methods, Instruments & Computers, 1998
- Visual information processing: topography of brain electrical activityBiological Psychology, 1995
- Low resolution electromagnetic tomography: a new method for localizing electrical activity in the brainInternational Journal of Psychophysiology, 1994
- Long-Term PotentiationAnnual Review of Neuroscience, 1987
- Mechanisms of MemoryScience, 1986
- Postnatal development of corticotectal neurons in the kitten striate cortex: An electrophysiological studyDevelopmental Brain Research, 1983
- Negative Aftereffects in Visual PerceptionScientific American, 1976