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THE HIPPOCAMPUS, LONG‐TERM POTENTIATION AND MEMORY

Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology, 1996
SUMMARY1. The induction of long‐term potentiation (LTP) at excitatory synapses on CA1 pyramidal neurons occurs partly through an increase in the quantal AMPA current. It is also accompanied by an increase in the number of active sites. Any presynaptic modification, requiring the presence of a retrograde messenger, remains uncertain.2.
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Long-term potentiation in spinothalamic neurons

Brain Research Reviews, 2002
Sensitization of nociceptive dorsal horn neurons, including spinothalamic tract (STT) cells, is thought to underlie the development of secondary hyperalgesia and allodynia following tissue injury. In central sensitization, responses to stimulation of sensory receptors are enhanced without any change in the excitability of the primary afferent neurons ...
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Long-Term Potentiation and Memory

1989
Long-term potentiation (LTP) is an enduring change in synaptic efficacy at monosynaptic junctions in the mammalian brain. LTP was first observed in the hippocampus, in area CAI and the dentate gyrus. The link between LTP and hippocampus is well established and suggests a role for LTP in learning and memory, as is widely hypothesized for the hippocampus.
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Long-Term Potentiation as a Model

1995
Long-term potentiation (LTP) is a strengthening of synaptic transmission that was first discovered in the hippocampus (Bliss and Lomo, 1973). If one stimulates the afferents to the hippocampus at a high rate (100 Hz for 3 sec), the excitatory postsynaptic potentials in the hippocampal pyramidal cells are subsequently found to be larger than normal, and
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Long-Term Potentiation

2018
Androulla Ioannou   +1 more
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Long-Term Potentiation

2019
Jitendra Kumar Sinha   +2 more
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The current excitement in long term potentiation

Neuron, 1988
Roger A. Nicoll   +2 more
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The Role of Calcium in Long‐Term Potentiation

Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1989
Robert C. Malenka   +2 more
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