Experience-dependent slow-wave sleep development

Nature Neuroscience
Hiroyuki MiyamotoTakao K Hensch

Abstract

Sleep enhances plasticity in neocortex, and thereby improves sensory learning. Here we show that sleep itself undergoes changes as a consequence of waking experience during a late critical period in cats and mice. Dark-rearing produced a robust and reversible decrement of slow-wave electrical activity during sleep that was restricted to visual cortex and impaired by gene-targeted reduction of NMDA receptor function.

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Citations

Nov 26, 2003·Brain Research Bulletin·Giulio Tononi, Chiara Cirelli
Nov 2, 2005·Nature Reviews. Neuroscience·Takao K Hensch
Nov 6, 2008·Nature Reviews. Neuroscience·James M KruegerJaak Panksepp
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Jun 26, 2004·Annual Review of Neuroscience·Takao K Hensch
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Jul 17, 2009·The Journal of Neuroscience : the Official Journal of the Society for Neuroscience·Fabio LongordoAnita Lüthi
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Dec 20, 2014·The Journal of Experimental Biology·Ada Eban-Rothschild, Guy Bloch
Apr 20, 2021·Neuroscience Research·Yoshi-Taka MatsudaTakao K Hensch

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