Details

scope
cortex/HC
claim_text
Repetitive Sensory Stimulation Potentiates and Recruits Sensory-Evoked Cortical Population Activity.
section_id
section_06
source_url
https://github.com/AllenNeuralDynamics/ComputationalReviewVIP/blob/95e761177f7d2ec565983d3307c14ec238f9677c/evidence/section_06_evidence_package.json
review_repo
ComputationalReviewVIP
section_ref
wiki_page:computationalreviewvip-06-synaptic-properties
source_kind
review_finding
source_path
evidence/section_06_evidence_package.json
source_span
study_system
cortex/HC
section_title
Synaptic Properties and Connectivity
review_bundle_ref
analysis_bundle:ab-2ce40c33e827
replication_status
single
review_package_ref
analysis_bundle:ab-2ce40c33e827
source_artifact_ref
wiki_page:computationalreviewvip-06-synaptic-properties
origin_url
https://github.com/AllenNeuralDynamics/ComputationalReviewVIP/blob/95e761177f7d2ec565983d3307c14ec238f9677c/evidence/section_06_evidence_package.json
commit_sha
95e761177f7d2ec565983d3307c14ec238f9677c
created_by
persona-jerome-lecoq-gbo-neuroscience
repository_url
https://github.com/AllenNeuralDynamics/ComputationalReviewVIP
Raw fields (5)
raw_fields
{
  "n": "",
  "doi": "10.1523/jneurosci.2189-23.2024",
  "claim": "Repetitive Sensory Stimulation Potentiates and Recruits Sensory-Evoked Cortical Population Activity.",
  "title": null,
  "cite_key": "Williams2025",
  "evidence": "Repetitive Sensory Stimulation Potentiates and Recruits Sensory-Evoked Cortical Population Activity.. Sensory experience and learning are thought to be associated with plasticity of neocortical circuits. Repetitive sensory stimulation can induce long-term potentiation (LTP) of cortical excitatory synapses in anesthetized mice; however, it is unclear if these phenomena are associated with sustained changes in activity during wakefulness. Here we used time-lapse, calcium imaging of layer (L) 2/3 neurons in the primary somatosensory cortex (S1), in awake male mice, to assess the effects of a bout",
  "effect_size": null,
  "text_access": "abstract_only",
  "study_system": "cortex/HC",
  "_source_cluster": "cluster_05_synaptic_connectivity",
  "replication_status": "single",
  "_source_cluster_index": 190,
  "claim_source_sentence": null,
  "replication_evidence_dois": []
}
source_refs
[
  "paper:paper-538bb92d6a7a"
]
evidence_refs
[
  {
    "ref": "paper:paper-538bb92d6a7a"
  }
]
source_policy
{
  "mode": "public_source_pointer_with_short_context",
  "notes": [
    "Local review repositories are read-only inputs.",
    "SciDEX stores paper metadata, structured evidence, file pointers, and short citation contexts; it does not copy full review prose."
  ],
  "source_commit_sha": "95e761177f7d2ec565983d3307c14ec238f9677c",
  "source_repository_url": "https://github.com/AllenNeuralDynamics/ComputationalReviewVIP"
}
evidence_summary
Repetitive Sensory Stimulation Potentiates and Recruits Sensory-Evoked Cortical Population Activity.. Sensory experience and learning are thought to be associated with plasticity of neocortical circuits. Repetitive sensory stimulation can induce long-term potentiation (LTP) of cortical excitatory synapses in anesthetized mice; however, it is unclear if these phenomena are associated with sustained changes in activity during wakefulness. Here we used time-lapse, calcium imaging of layer (L) 2/3 neurons in the primary somatosensory cortex (S1), in awake male mice, to assess the effects of a bout

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