Adaptive plasticity in the spinal stretch reflex: an accessible substrate of memory?.

TitleAdaptive plasticity in the spinal stretch reflex: an accessible substrate of memory?.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication1985
AuthorsWolpaw, J
JournalCellular and molecular neurobiology
Volume5
Pagination147–165
Date Published06/1985
ISSN0272-4340
KeywordsLearning, Memory, plasticity, primate, spinal reflex, stretch reflex
Abstract

The study of the substrates of memory in higher vertebrates is one of the major problems of neurobiology. A simple and technically accessible experimental model is needed. Recent studies have demonstrated long-term adaptive plasticity, a form of memory, in the spinal stretch reflex (SSR). The SSR is due largely to a two-neuron monosynaptic arc, the simplest, best-defined, and most accessible pathway in the primate central nervous system (CNS). Monkeys can slowly change SSR amplitude without a change in initial muscle length or alpha motoneuron tone, when reward is made contingent on amplitude. Change occurs over weeks and months and persists for long periods. It is relatively specific to the agonist muscle and affects movement. The salient features of SSR adaptive plasticity, combined with clinical and laboratory evidence indicating spinal cord capacity for intrinsic change, suggest that SSR change eventually involves persistent segmental alteration. If this is the case, SSR plasticity should be a powerful model for studying the neuronal and synaptic substrates of memory in a primate.

URLhttp://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3161616
DOI10.1007/BF00711090

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