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Temporal patterns of fluoxetine-induced plasticity in the mouse visual cortex
[article]
2018
bioRxiv
pre-print
Heightened neuronal plasticity expressed during early postnatal life has been thought to permanently decline once critical periods have ended. For example, monocular deprivation is able to shift ocular dominance in the mouse visual cortex during the first months of life, but this effect is lost later in life. However, various treatments such as the antidepressant fluoxetine can reactivate a critical period-like plasticity in the adult brain. When monocular deprivation is supplemented with
doi:10.1101/487553
fatcat:idparbcdvnc25ahofdojalbfui