YoVDO

Stepwise Synaptic Plasticity Events Drive the Early Phase of Memory Consolidation

Offered By: Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics via YouTube

Tags

Synaptic Plasticity Courses Neurobiology Courses Associative Learning Courses Cellular Mechanisms Courses

Course Description

Overview

Save Big on Coursera Plus. 7,000+ courses at $160 off. Limited Time Only!
Explore a 40-minute conference talk by Yasunori Hayashi from Kyoto University on the early phase of memory consolidation and synaptic plasticity. Delve into the neurobiology of learning and the timescales involved in associating events in the brain. Examine how neural events occurring within milliseconds can lead to long-term memory formation. Discover the molecular, cellular, and circuit-level mechanisms that bridge multiple timescales in individual experiences. Gain insights into the biological processes supporting associative learning across various time frames. Recorded as part of the Timescales of Plasticity and Underlying Mechanisms conference at the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, this talk contributes to an integrated analysis of statistical learning spanning molecular, cellular, circuit, and behavioral-level phenomena.

Syllabus

Stepwise synaptic plasticity events drive the early phase of... ▸ Yasunori Hayashi (Kyoto Univ.)


Taught by

Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics

Related Courses

Input- and Target-Specific Synaptic Plasticity in Neocortical Networks During Sensory Learning - Alison Barth
Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics via YouTube
A Directed Form of Synaptic Plasticity Produces Experience-Dependent Hippocampal Representations
Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics via YouTube
Perspectives and Discussion - Synaptic Cooperativity-Independence
Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics via YouTube
Local Translation of Synaptopodin as a Synaptic-Tagging Mechanism
Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics via YouTube
Behavioral Timescale Cooperativity and Competitive Synaptic Interactions - Thomas O'Dell (UCLA Med)
Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics via YouTube