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Long-Term Potentiation and Long-Term Depression
Synaptic plasticity, the ability of chemical synapses to strengthen or weaken, has long been postulated to be a mechanistic basis of memory. Long-term potentiation (LTP), one form of synaptic plasticity, is defined as a persistent increase in the strength of synaptic transmission, whereas long-term depression (LTD) is the opposite—a persistent decrease openaire +1 more sourceLong-Term Potentiation
2010 Gabriele Fischer, Annemarie Unger, W. Wolfgang Fleischhacker, Cécile Viollet, Jacques Epelbaum, Daniel Hoyer, Ina Weiner, Ian Hindmarch, Martina de Zwaan, Joseph H. Friedman, David A. Brent, Fadi T. Maalouf, Paul Willner, Francis C. Colpaert, Eric J. Nestler, David S. Tait, Verity J. Brown, Malcolm Lader, Tooru M. Mizuno, Paolo Nencini, Michele S. Milella, Daniel Hoyer, W. Wolfgang Fleischhacker, Stephen B. Dunnett, Paul Newhouse, Heather Wilkins, Kim Wolff, Alyson J. Bond, Angus Mackay, Sarah Morgan, James Winslow, Jason C. G. Halford, Gorkem Yararbas, Sakire Pogun, Tayfun Uzbay, Lisiane Bizarro, Martine Cador, Roshan Cools, Dietrich van Calker, Anne Berghöfer, Ben J. Harrison, Christos Pantelis, Lawrence H. Price, Ian P. Stolerman, Gorkem Yararbas, Sakire Pogun, Anthony L. Riley, Steve Kohut, Andreas Marneros, Helen E. Gibson, Susan Jones, Iván Izquierdo, Lia R. Bevilaqua, Martin Cammarota, Elizabeth C. Warburton, Elizabeth C. Warburton, Malcolm Lader, Lance R. McMahon, Lance R. McMahon +58 moreopenaire +1 more source