Litcius/Paper detail

Modulating Frontal Networks’ Timing-Dependent-Like Plasticity With Paired Associative Stimulation Protocols: Recent Advances and Future Perspectives

Giacomo Guidali, Camilla Roncoroni, Nadia Bolognini

2021Frontiers in Human Neuroscience21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

(PAS) protocols have been used in humans to study brain connectivity in motor and sensory networks by exploiting the intrinsic properties of timing-dependent cortical plasticity. In the last 10 years, PAS have also been developed to investigate the plastic properties of complex cerebral systems, such as the frontal ones, with promising results. In the present work, we review the most recent advances of this technique, focusing on protocols targeting frontal cortices to investigate connectivity and its plastic properties, subtending high-order cognitive functions like memory, decision-making, attentional, or emotional processing. Overall, current evidence reveals that PAS can be effectively used to assess, enhance or depress physiological connectivity within frontal networks in a timing-dependent way, in turn modulating cognitive processing in healthy and pathological conditions.

Topics & Concepts

NeuroscienceCognitionAssociative propertyFunctional connectivityNeuroplasticityPsychologyBrain stimulationSensory systemComputer scienceStimulationMathematicsPure mathematicsTranscranial Magnetic Stimulation StudiesFunctional Brain Connectivity StudiesNeurological disorders and treatments
Modulating Frontal Networks’ Timing-Dependent-Like Plasticity With Paired Associative Stimulation Protocols: Recent Advances and Future Perspectives | Litcius