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How Visual Experience Rewires the Brain | Mark Bear on Neuroplasticity

Feb 3, 2026
Mark Bear, MIT neuroscientist known for pioneering work on visual cortex and critical periods. He explains why vision is ideal for studying experience-driven brain change. Short, clear takes on monocular deprivation, how critical periods open and close, synaptic pruning, adult visual plasticity, and links to disorders like amblyopia and Fragile X.
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INSIGHT

Blindness Drives Cortical Reallocation

  • When regions of cortex receive no visual input, they get repurposed for other senses in congenital blindness.
  • The brain reallocates tissue so no cortical area goes unused.
INSIGHT

Vision Can Originate In The Brain

  • Visual experiences, dreams, or hallucinations arise from brain-generated activity, not necessarily retinal input.
  • Sensory deprivation or hallucinogens let intrinsic cortical activity produce vivid 'vision'.
INSIGHT

Molecular Steps For Memory Persistence

  • Persistent memories recruit new protein synthesis and modulatory systems like cyclic AMP signaling.
  • Pharmacologically enhancing these pathways can boost memory persistence but side effects have limited therapeutic success so far.
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