Tuesday, August 16, 2016

Understanding adult neurogenesis beyond its role in learning and memory formation AL Wani - Educación Médica, 2016

You need this so DEMAND your doctor get this and write up a stroke protocol for you.
http://scholar.google.com/scholar_url?url=http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1575181316300791&hl=en&sa=X&scisig=AAGBfm1vLGUcMc2DXWcLmo5nwB_oeBkepQ&nossl=1&oi=scholaralrt
Open Access funded by Fundación Lilly
Under a Creative Commons license

Abstract

There has been a shift in the understanding of brain, neurons, and their functional role over the last two decades. Earlier it was believed that the brain was a static organ and was not subject to any change throughout life. An understanding was developed later that brain reorganizes its structure by a specific property called neuroplasticity. Recent research shows that the brain generates new neurons even in the adult stage, and this process is called adult neurogenesis. Although researchers still not have all the answers about the newborn neurons, and why and how they are generated, and what is their role, some have highlighted the importance of these in learning and memory formation, and even in memories of fear and spatial navigation. A wide range of environmental experience influences the generation of newborn neurons and their functional variability. There are questions about how different environmental experiences cause the differences in the generation of new neurons. Recently the field of optogenetics attempted to answer the questions on adult neurogenesis. However there are still questions about adult neurogenesis which needs a more naturalistic approach, for their better understanding.

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