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Q: How does neuroplasticity work in the human brain?
Krishna: Neuroplasticity is the brain's lifelong ability to reorganize its structure, functions, and connections in response to learning, experience, or injury. It works by strengthening active neural pathways (synaptic plasticity) and forming new ones while eliminating unused connections, driven by molecular changes like increased brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF).
The adult brain retains the capacity for neuroplasticity, allowing structural and functional changes in response to experience, learning, and injury. This adaptability is shaped by factors such as practice, physical exercise, sleep, and stress, but operates within biological limits. Neuroplasticity is experience-dependent, value-neutral, and persists throughout life, though meaningful change requires sustained effort.
Neuroplasticity involves changes in how existing brain cells communicate with one another.
When you learn a new skill, specific synapses, the tiny junctions where neurons pass signals to each other, become stronger and more efficient. Neural networks, which are groups of neurons that work together, become better organized. Communication between brain regions involved in that skill improves.
At the cellular level, plasticity involves changes in synaptic structure, the release of chemical messengers called neurotransmitters, and the sensitivity of receptors that receive those signals. So, it changes how neurons communicate with each other.
In a few areas of the adult brain, particularly the hippocampus, which plays a key role in memory, limited adult neurogenesis, the creation of new neurons, also occurs. Although influenced by factors such as stress, sleep and physical activity, its significance in humans is still debated.
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Key Mechanisms of Neuroplasticity (3)
Synaptic Plasticity: The fundamental mechanism where connections between neurons (synapses) strengthen or weaken based on activity levels (long-term potentiation or depression).
Structural Changes: The brain physically changes by sprouting new synaptic connections, remodelling existing ones, or growing new neurons (neurogenesis), particularly in the hippocampus.
Functional Reorganization: The brain assigns functions to new areas after damage or consistently new experiences, shifting neural networks to adapt.
Factors Driving Neuroplasticity (4)
Learning and Experience: Acquiring new skills or storing memories physically alters neural circuitry.
Repetition: Consistently repeating an action or thought strengthens the neural pathways involved, making the change permanent.
Exercise & Environment: Physical activity boosts BDNF, a protein that supports neuron health, while stimulating environments encourage connection growth.
Focus and Intent: Focused attention on a task enhances the speed and extent of brain reorganization.
Types of Plasticity
Functional Plasticity: The brain's ability to move functions from a damaged area to undamaged areas.
Structural Plasticity: The brain's ability to actually change its physical structure through learning.
Neuroplasticity allows the brain to remain flexible, adapting to new information and recovering from injuries, though its rate tends to slow with age.
What strengthens and weakens this plasticity? (2)
1. Practice and challenge are essential.
Repeatedly engaging in tasks that stretch your abilities leads to changes in both brain activity and brain structure, even in older adults.
2. Physical exercise is one of the most powerful enhancers of plasticity.
Aerobic activity increases levels of brain-derived neurotrophic factor, or BDNF, which supports neuron survival and strengthens synaptic connections. Regular exercise is consistently linked to better learning, memory and overall brain health.
3. Sleep plays a critical role in consolidating brain changes.
During deep sleep, important neural connections are strengthened while less useful ones are weakened, supporting learning and emotional regulation, as shown in neuroscience research.
4. Chronic stress can seriously impair plasticity.
Long-term exposure to stress hormones is associated with reduced complexity of neural connections in memory-related brain regions and heightened sensitivity in threat-processing systems, undermining learning and flexibility.
However, some neuroscientists say that brains can't actually 'rewire' themselves (1).
Writing in eLife, two neuroscientists – Tamar Makin and John Krakauer – argue that the most influential experiments in this field don't conclusively show that the brain can functionally reorganize itself.
Footnotes:
1. https://elifesciences.org/articles/84716
2. https://theconversation.com/scientists-once-thought-the-brain-could...
3. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK557811/#:~:text=Neuroplastici....
4. https://www.physio-pedia.com/Neuroplasticity#:~:text=The%20ability%....
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