grey matter can change, and synapses
may strengthen or weaken over time. The aim of neuroplasticity is to
optimize the neural networks during phylogenesis, ontogeny, and
physiological learning, as well as after a brain injury.
Research in the latter half of the 20th century showed that many
aspects of the brain can be altered (or are "plastic") even through
adulthood. However, the developing brain exhibits a higher degree of plasticity than the adult brain.
Neuroplasticity can be observed at multiple scales, from microscopic changes in individual neurons to larger-scale changes such as cortical remapping in response to injury. Behavior, environmental stimuli, thought, and emotions may also cause neuroplastic change through activity-dependent plasticity, which has significant implications for healthy development, learning, memory, and recovery from brain damage. At the single cell level, synaptic plasticity refers to changes in the connections between neurons, whereas non-synaptic plasticity refers to changes in their intrinsic excitability.
Neuroplasticity, also known as brain plasticity, neuroelasticity, or neural plasticity,
is the ability of the brain to change continuously throughout an
individual's life, e.g., brain activity associated with a given function
can be transferred to a different location, the proportion of Neuroplasticity can be observed at multiple scales, from microscopic changes in individual neurons to larger-scale changes such as cortical remapping in response to injury. Behavior, environmental stimuli, thought, and emotions may also cause neuroplastic change through activity-dependent plasticity, which has significant implications for healthy development, learning, memory, and recovery from brain damage. At the single cell level, synaptic plasticity refers to changes in the connections between neurons, whereas non-synaptic plasticity refers to changes in their intrinsic excitability.
Neurobiology
JT Wall and J Xu have traced the mechanisms underlying neuroplasticity. Re-organization is not cortically emergent, but occurs at every level in the processing hierarchy; this produces the map changes observed in the cerebral cortex.
Applications and example
The adult brain is not entirely "hard-wired" with fixed neuronal circuits.
There are many instances of cortical and subcortical rewiring of
neuronal circuits in response to training as well as in response to
injury. There is solid evidence that neurogenesis (birth of brain cells) occurs in the adult, mammalian brain—and such changes can persist well into old age. The evidence for neurogenesis is mainly restricted to the hippocampus and olfactory bulb, but current research has revealed that other parts of the brain, including the cerebellum, may be involved as well.
However, the degree of rewiring induced by the integration of new
neurons in the established circuits is not known, and such rewiring may
well be functionally redundant.
There is now ample evidence
for the active, experience-dependent re-organization of the synaptic
networks of the brain involving multiple inter-related structures
including the cerebral cortex. The specific details of how this process
occurs at the molecular and ultrastructural
levels are topics of active neuroscience research. The way experience
can influence the synaptic organization of the brain is also the basis
for a number of theories of brain function including the general theory
of mind and Neural Darwinism.
The concept of neuroplasticity is also central to theories of memory
and learning that are associated with experience-driven alteration of
synaptic structure and function in studies of classical conditioning in invertebrate animal models such as Aplysia.
Treatment of brain damage
A
surprising consequence of neuroplasticity is that the brain activity
associated with a given function can be transferred to a different
location; this can result from normal experience and also occurs in the
process of recovery from brain injury. Neuroplasticity is the
fundamental issue that supports the scientific basis for treatment of acquired brain injury with goal-directed experiential therapeutic programs in the context of rehabilitation approaches to the functional consequences of the injury.
Neuroplasticity is gaining popularity as a theory that, at least
in part, explains improvements in functional outcomes with physical
therapy post-stroke. Rehabilitation techniques that are supported by
evidence which suggest cortical reorganization as the mechanism of
change include constraint-induced movement therapy, functional electrical stimulation, treadmill training with body-weight support, and virtual reality therapy. Robot assisted therapy
is an emerging technique, which is also hypothesized to work by way of
neuroplasticity, though there is currently insufficient evidence to
determine the exact mechanisms of change when using this method.
One group has developed a treatment that includes increased levels of progesterone injections in brain-injured patients. "Administration of progesterone after traumatic brain injury (TBI) and stroke reduces edema, inflammation, and neuronal cell death, and enhances spatial reference memory and sensory motor recovery."
In a clinical trial, a group of severely injured patients had a 60%
reduction in mortality after three days of progesterone injections. However, a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine
in 2014 detailing the results of a multi-center NIH-funded phase III
clinical trial of 882 patients found that treatment of acute traumatic
brain injury with the hormone progesterone provides no significant
benefit to patients when compared with placebo.
Vision
For decades, researchers assumed that humans had to acquire binocular vision, in particular stereopsis, in early childhood or they would never gain it. In recent years, however, successful improvements in persons with amblyopia, convergence insufficiency or other stereo vision anomalies have become prime examples of neuroplasticity; binocular vision improvements and stereopsis recovery are now active areas of scientific and clinical research.
Brain training
Several companies have offered so-called cognitive training software programs for various purposes that claim to work via neuroplasticity; one example is Fast ForWord which is marketed to help children with learning disabilities.
A systematic meta-analytic review found that "There is no evidence
from the analysis carried out that Fast ForWord is effective as a
treatment for children's oral language or reading difficulties".
A 2016 review found very little evidence supporting any of the claims of
Fast ForWord and other commercial products, as their task-specific
effects fail to generalise to other tasks.
Sensory prostheses
Neuroplasticity
is involved in the development of sensory function. The brain is born
immature and it adapts to sensory inputs after birth. In the auditory
system, congenital hearing impairment, a rather frequent inborn
condition affecting 1 of 1000 newborns, has been shown to affect
auditory development, and implantation of a sensory prostheses activating the auditory system has prevented the deficits and induced functional maturation of the auditory system.
Due to a sensitive period for plasticity, there is also a sensitive
period for such intervention within the first 2–4 years of life.
Consequently, in prelingually deaf children, early cochlear implantation, as a rule, allows the children to learn the mother language and acquire acoustic communication.
Phantom limbs
In the phenomenon of phantom limb sensation, a person continues to feel pain or sensation within a part of their body that has been amputated. This is strangely common, occurring in 60–80% of amputees. An explanation
for this is based on the concept of neuroplasticity, as the cortical
maps of the removed limbs are believed to have become engaged with the
area around them in the postcentral gyrus.
This results in activity within the surrounding area of the cortex
being misinterpreted by the area of the cortex formerly responsible for
the amputated limb.
The relationship between phantom limb sensation and neuroplasticity is a complex one. In the early 1990s V.S. Ramachandran
theorized that phantom limbs were the result of cortical remapping.
However, in 1995 Herta Flor and her colleagues demonstrated that
cortical remapping occurs only in patients who have phantom pain.
Her research showed that phantom limb pain (rather than referred
sensations) was the perceptual correlate of cortical reorganization. This phenomenon is sometimes referred to as maladaptive plasticity.
In 2009 Lorimer Moseley and Peter Brugger carried out a
remarkable experiment in which they encouraged arm amputee subjects to
use visual imagery to contort their phantom limbs into impossible
configurations. Four of the seven subjects succeeded in performing
impossible movements of the phantom limb. This experiment suggests that
the subjects had modified the neural representation of their phantom
limbs and generated the motor commands needed to execute impossible
movements in the absence of feedback from the body.
The authors stated that: "In fact, this finding extends our
understanding of the brain's plasticity because it is evidence that
profound changes in the mental representation of the body can be induced
purely by internal brain mechanisms—the brain truly does change
itself."
Chronic pain
Individuals who suffer from chronic pain experience prolonged pain at
sites that may have been previously injured, yet are otherwise
currently healthy. This phenomenon is related to neuroplasticity due to a
maladaptive reorganization of the nervous system, both peripherally and
centrally. During the period of tissue damage, noxious stimuli and inflammation cause an elevation of nociceptive input from the periphery to the central nervous system. Prolonged nociception from the periphery then elicits a neuroplastic response at the cortical level to change its somatotopic organization for the painful site, inducing central sensitization. For instance, individuals experiencing complex regional pain syndrome
demonstrate a diminished cortical somatotopic representation of the
hand contralaterally as well as a decreased spacing between the hand and
the mouth. Additionally, chronic pain has been reported to significantly reduce the volume of grey matter in the brain globally, and more specifically at the prefrontal cortex and right thalamus.
However, following treatment, these abnormalities in cortical
reorganization and grey matter volume are resolved, as well as their
symptoms. Similar results have been reported for phantom limb pain, chronic low back pain and carpal tunnel syndrome.
Meditation
A number of studies have linked meditation practice to differences in cortical thickness or density of gray matter. One of the most well-known studies to demonstrate this was led by Sara Lazar, from Harvard University, in 2000. Richard Davidson, a neuroscientist at the University of Wisconsin, has led experiments in cooperation with the Dalai Lama
on effects of meditation on the brain. His results suggest that
long-term or short-term practice of meditation results in different
levels of activity in brain regions associated with such qualities as attention, anxiety, depression, fear, anger,
and the ability of the body to heal itself. These functional changes
may be caused by changes in the physical structure of the brain.
Fitness and exercise
Aerobic exercise promotes adult neurogenesis by increasing the production of neurotrophic factors (compounds that promote growth or survival of neurons), such as brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1), and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). Exercise-induced neurogenesis in the hippocampus is associated with measurable improvements in spatial memory. Consistent aerobic exercise over a period of several months induces marked clinically significant improvements in executive function (i.e., the "cognitive control" of behavior) and increased gray matter volume in multiple brain regions, particularly those that give rise to cognitive control. The brain structures that show the greatest improvements in gray matter volume in response to aerobic exercise are the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus; moderate improvements are seen in the anterior cingulate cortex, parietal cortex, cerebellum, caudate nucleus, and nucleus accumbens. Higher physical fitness scores (measured by VO2 max)
are associated with better executive function, faster processing speed,
and greater volume of the hippocampus, caudate nucleus, and nucleus
accumbens.
Human echolocation
Human echolocation is a learned ability for humans to sense their environment from echoes. This ability is used by some blind people to navigate their environment and sense their surroundings in detail. Studies in 2010 and 2011 using functional magnetic resonance imaging
techniques have shown that parts of the brain associated with visual
processing are adapted for the new skill of echolocation. Studies with
blind patients, for example, suggest that the click-echoes heard by
these patients were processed by brain regions devoted to vision rather
than audition.
ADHD stimulants
Reviews of MRI studies on individuals with ADHD suggest that the long-term treatment of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) with stimulants, such as amphetamine or methylphenidate,
decreases abnormalities in brain structure and function found in
subjects with ADHD, and improves function in several parts of the brain,
such as the right caudate nucleus of the basal ganglia.
In children
Neuroplasticity is most active in childhood as a part of normal human development, and can also be seen as an especially important mechanism for children in terms of risk and resiliency.
Trauma is considered a great risk as it negatively affects many areas
of the brain and puts strain on the sympathetic nervous system from
constant activation. Trauma thus alters the brain's connections such
that children who have experienced trauma may be hyper vigilant or
overly aroused. However a child's brain can cope with these adverse effects through the actions of neuroplasticity.
There are many examples of neuroplasticity in human development.
In an article written by Justine Ker and Stephen Nelson, the effects of
musical training on neuroplasticity is looked at. Musical training is a
form of experience dependent plasticity. This is when changes in the
brain occur based on experiences that are unique to an individual.
Examples of this are learning multiple languages, playing a sport, doing
theatre, etc. A study done by Hyde in 2009, showed that changes in the
brain of children could be seen in as little as 15 months of musical
training.
Ker and Nelson suggest this degree of plasticity in the brain's of
children can "help provide a form of intervention for children... with
developmental disorders and neurological diseases."
In animals
In a single lifespan, individuals of an animal species may encounter various changes in brain morphology. Many of these differences are caused by the release of hormones in the brain; others are the product of evolutionary factors or developmental stages. Some changes occur seasonally in species to enhance or generate response behaviors.
Seasonal brain changes
Changing brain behavior and morphology to suit other seasonal behaviors is relatively common in animals. These changes can improve the chances of mating during breeding season. Examples of seasonal brain morphology change can be found within many classes and species.
Within the class Aves, black-capped chickadees experience an increase in the volume of their hippocampus and strength of neural connections to the hippocampus during fall months. These morphological changes within the hippocampus which are related to spatial memory are not limited to birds, as they can also be observed in rodents and amphibians. In songbirds, many song control nuclei in the brain increase in size during mating season. Among birds, changes in brain morphology to influence song patterns, frequency, and volume are common. Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) immunoreactivity, or the reception of the hormone, is lowered in European starlings exposed to longer periods of light during the day.
The California sea hare, a gastropod, has more successful inhibition of egg-laying hormones outside of mating season due to increased effectiveness of inhibitors in the brain. Changes to the inhibitory nature of regions of the brain can also be found in humans and other mammals. In the amphibian Bufo japonicus, part of the amygdala is larger before breeding and during hibernation than it is after breeding.
Seasonal brain variation occurs within many mammals. Part of the hypothalamus of the common ewe is more receptive to GnRH during breeding season than at other times of the year. Humans experience a change in the "size of the hypothalamic suprachiasmatic nucleus and vasopressin-immunoreactive neurons within it" during the fall, when these parts are larger. In the spring, both reduce in size.
Traumatic brain injury research
Randy Nudo's group found that if a small stroke
(an infarction) is induced by obstruction of blood flow to a portion of
a monkey's motor cortex, the part of the body that responds by movement
moves when areas adjacent to the damaged brain area are stimulated. In
one study, intracortical microstimulation (ICMS) mapping techniques were
used in nine normal monkeys. Some underwent ischemic-infarction
procedures and the others, ICMS procedures. The monkeys with ischemic
infarctions retained more finger flexion during food retrieval and after
several months this deficit returned to preoperative levels. With respect to the distal forelimb
representation, "postinfarction mapping procedures revealed that
movement representations underwent reorganization throughout the
adjacent, undamaged cortex."
Understanding of interaction between the damaged and undamaged areas
provides a basis for better treatment plans in stroke patients. Current
research includes the tracking of changes that occur in the motor areas
of the cerebral cortex as a result of a stroke. Thus, events that occur
in the reorganization process of the brain can be ascertained. Nudo is
also involved in studying the treatment plans that may enhance recovery
from strokes, such as physiotherapy, pharmacotherapy, and electrical-stimulation therapy.
Jon Kaas, a professor at Vanderbilt University,
has been able to show "how somatosensory area 3b and ventroposterior
(VP) nucleus of the thalamus are affected by longstanding unilateral
dorsal-column lesions at cervical levels in macaque monkeys."
Adult brains have the ability to change as a result of injury but the
extent of the reorganization depends on the extent of the injury. His
recent research focuses on the somatosensory system, which involves a
sense of the body and its movements using many senses. Usually, damage
of the somatosensory cortex results in impairment of the body
perception. Kaas' research project is focused on how these systems
(somatosensory, cognitive, motor systems) respond with plastic changes
resulting from injury.
One recent study of neuroplasticity involves work done by a team of doctors and researchers at Emory University, specifically Dr. Donald Stein
and Dr. David Wright. This is the first treatment in 40 years that has
significant results in treating traumatic brain injuries while also
incurring no known side effects and being cheap to administer.
Dr. Stein noticed that female mice seemed to recover from brain
injuries better than male mice, and that at certain points in the estrus cycle,
females recovered even better. This difference may be attributed to
different levels of progesterone, with higher levels of progesterone
leading to the faster recovery from brain injury in mice. However,
clinical trials showed progesterone offers no significant benefit for
traumatic brain injury human patients.
Aging
Transcriptional profiling of the frontal cortex of persons ranging from 26 to 106 years of age defined a set of genes with reduced expression after age 40, and especially after age 70. Genes that play central roles in synaptic plasticity
were the most significantly affected by age, generally showing reduced
expression over time. There was also a marked increase in cortical DNA damage, likely oxidative DNA damage, in gene promoters with aging.
Reactive oxygen species appear to have a significant role in the regulation of synaptic plasticity and cognitive function. However age-related increases in reactive oxygen species may also lead to impairments in these functions.
History
Origin
The term "plasticity" was first applied to behavior in 1890 by William James in The Principles of Psychology. The first person to use the term neural plasticity appears to have been the Polish neuroscientist Jerzy Konorski.
In 1793, Italian anatomist Michele Vicenzo Malacarne described
experiments in which he paired animals, trained one of the pair
extensively for years, and then dissected both. He discovered that the
cerebellums of the trained animals were substantially larger. But these
findings were eventually forgotten. The idea that the brain and its function are not fixed throughout adulthood was proposed in 1890 by William James in The Principles of Psychology, though the idea was largely neglected.
Until around the 1970s, neuroscientists believed that the brain's
structure and function was essentially fixed throughout adulthood.
The term has since seen broadly applied:
Given the central importance of neuroplasticity, an outsider would be forgiven for assuming that it was well defined and that a basic and universal framework served to direct current and future hypotheses and experimentation. Sadly, however, this is not the case. While many neuroscientists use the word neuroplasticity as an umbrella term it means different things to different researchers in different subfields ... In brief, a mutually agreed upon framework does not appear to exist.
Research and discovery
In 1923, Karl Lashley conducted experiments on rhesus monkeys
that demonstrated changes in neuronal pathways, which he concluded were
evidence of plasticity. Despite this, and other research that suggested
plasticity took place, neuroscientists did not widely accept the idea
of neuroplasticity.
In 1945, Justo Gonzalo concluded from his research of brain dynamics, that, contrary to the activity of the projection areas,
the "central" cortical mass (more or less equidistant from the visual,
tactile and auditive projection areas), would be a "maneuvering mass",
rather unspecific or multisensory, with capacity to increase neural
excitability and re-organize the activity by means of plasticity
properties. He gives as a first example of adaptation, to see upright with reversing glasses in the Stratton experiment,
and specially, several first-hand brain injuries cases in which he
observed dynamic and adaptive properties in their disorders, in
particular in the inverted perception disorder [e.g., see pp 260–62 Vol.
I (1945), p 696 Vol. II (1950)].
He stated that a sensory signal in a projection area would be only an
inverted and constricted outline that would be magnified due to the
increase in recruited cerebral mass, and re-inverted due to some effect
of brain plasticity, in more central areas, following a spiral growth.
Marian Diamond
of the University of California, Berkeley, produced the first
scientific evidence of anatomical brain plasticity, publishing her
research in 1964.
Other significant evidence was produced in the 1960s and after, notably from scientists including Paul Bach-y-Rita, Michael Merzenich along with Jon Kaas, as well as several others.
In the 1960s, Paul Bach-y-Rita
invented a device that was tested on a small number of people, and
involved a person sitting in a chair, in which were embedded nubs that
were made to vibrate in ways that translated images received in a
camera, allowing a form of vision via sensory substitution.
Studies in people recovering from stroke
also provided support for neuroplasticity, as regions of the brain
remained healthy could sometimes take over, at least in part, functions
that had been destroyed; Shepherd Ivory Franz did work in this area.
Eleanor Maguire documented changes in hippocampal structure associated with acquiring the knowledge of London's layout in local taxi drivers.
A redistribution of grey matter was indicated in London Taxi Drivers
compared to controls. This work on hippocampal plasticity not only
interested scientists, but also engaged the public and media worldwide.
Michael Merzenich
is a neuroscientist who has been one of the pioneers of neuroplasticity
for over three decades. He has made some of "the most ambitious claims
for the field – that brain exercises may be as useful as drugs to treat
diseases as severe as schizophrenia – that plasticity exists from cradle
to the grave, and that radical improvements in cognitive functioning –
how we learn, think, perceive, and remember are possible even in the
elderly." Merzenich's work was affected by a crucial discovery made by David Hubel and Torsten Wiesel
in their work with kittens. The experiment involved sewing one eye
shut and recording the cortical brain maps. Hubel and Wiesel saw that
the portion of the kitten's brain associated with the shut eye was not
idle, as expected. Instead, it processed visual information from the
open eye. It was "…as though the brain didn't want to waste any
'cortical real estate' and had found a way to rewire itself."
This implied neuroplasticity during the critical period. However,
Merzenich argued that neuroplasticity could occur beyond the critical
period. His first encounter with adult plasticity came when he was
engaged in a postdoctoral study with Clinton Woosley. The experiment was
based on observation of what occurred in the brain when one peripheral
nerve was cut and subsequently regenerated. The two scientists
micromapped the hand maps of monkey brains before and after cutting a
peripheral nerve and sewing the ends together. Afterwards, the hand map
in the brain that they expected to be jumbled was nearly normal. This
was a substantial breakthrough. Merzenich asserted that, "If the brain
map could normalize its structure in response to abnormal input, the
prevailing view that we are born with a hardwired system had to be
wrong. The brain had to be plastic." Merzenich received the 2016 Kavli Prize in Neuroscience "for the discovery of mechanisms that allow experience and neural activity to remodel brain function."