Heksor: the central nervous system substrate of an adaptive behaviour.

TitleHeksor: the central nervous system substrate of an adaptive behaviour.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2022
AuthorsWolpaw, JR, Kamesar, A
JournalJ Physiol
Volume600
Issue15
Pagination3423-3452
Date Published08/2022
ISSN1469-7793
KeywordsAdaptation, Psychological, Animals, central nervous system, Humans, Neuronal Plasticity, Plastics, Synapses
Abstract

Over the past half-century, the largely hardwired central nervous system (CNS) of 1970 has become the ubiquitously plastic CNS of today, in which change is the rule not the exception. This transformation complicates a central question in neuroscience: how are adaptive behaviours - behaviours that serve the needs of the individual - acquired and maintained through life? It poses a more basic question: how do many adaptive behaviours share the ubiquitously plastic CNS? This question compels neuroscience to adopt a new paradigm. The core of this paradigm is a CNS entity with unique properties, here given the name heksor from the Greek hexis. A heksor is a distributed network of neurons and synapses that changes itself as needed to maintain the key features of an adaptive behaviour, the features that make the behaviour satisfactory. Through their concurrent changes, the numerous heksors that share the CNS negotiate the properties of the neurons and synapses that they all use. Heksors keep the CNS in a state of negotiated equilibrium that enables each heksor to maintain the key features of its behaviour. The new paradigm based on heksors and the negotiated equilibrium they create is supported by animal and human studies of interactions among new and old adaptive behaviours, explains otherwise inexplicable results, and underlies promising new approaches to restoring behaviours impaired by injury or disease. Furthermore, the paradigm offers new and potentially important answers to extant questions, such as the generation and function of spontaneous neuronal activity, the aetiology of muscle synergies, and the control of homeostatic plasticity.

DOI10.1113/JP283291
Alternate JournalJ Physiol
PubMed ID35771667
PubMed Central IDPMC9545119
Grant ListNS069551 / GF / NIH HHS / United States
I01 CX001812 / CX / CSRD VA / United States
HD36020 / GF / NIH HHS / United States
I01 BX002550 / BX / BLRD VA / United States
R01 NS069551 / NS / NINDS NIH HHS / United States
P41 EB018783 / EB / NIBIB NIH HHS / United States
P01HD32571 / GF / NIH HHS / United States
NS22189 / GF / NIH HHS / United States
NS061823 / GF / NIH HHS / United States
P01 HD032571 / HD / NICHD NIH HHS / United States
R01 NS022189 / NS / NINDS NIH HHS / United States
R01 NS110577 / NS / NINDS NIH HHS / United States
R01 NS061823 / NS / NINDS NIH HHS / United States
P41EB018783 / GF / NIH HHS / United States
R01 HD036020 / HD / NICHD NIH HHS / United States

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