Boston: Elsevier, 2014. — 297 p.
Progress in Brain Research is the most acclaimed and accomplished series in neuroscience, firmly established as an extensive documentation of the advances in contemporary brain research. The volumes, some of which are derived from important international symposia, contain authoritative reviews and original articles by invited specialists. The rigorous editing of the volumes assures that they will appeal to all laboratory and clinical brain research workers in the various disciplines: neuroanatomy, neurophysiology, neuropharmacology, neuroendocrinology, neuropathology, basic neurology, biological psychiatry, and the behavioral sciences.
This volume, The Cerebellum and Memory Formation: Structure, Computation, and Function, covers topics including feedback control of cerebellar learning; cortico-cerebellar organization and skill acquisition; cerebellar plasticity and learning in the oculomotor system, and more.
Long-Term Depression as a Model of Cerebellar Plasticity.
The Organization of Plasticity in the Cerebellar Cortex: From Synapses to Control.
Questioning the Cerebellar Doctrine.
Distribution of Neural Plasticity in Cerebellum-Dependent Motor Learning.
Feedback Control of Learning by the Cerebello-Olivary Pathway.
Cerebellum-Dependent Motor Learning: Lessons from Adaptation of Eye Movements in Primates.
Decorrelation Learning in the Cerebellum: Computational Analysis and Experimental Questions.
Modeling the Evolution of the Cerebellum: From Macroevolution to Function.
Cerebellar and Prefrontal Cortex Contributions to Adaptation, Strategies, and Reinforcement Learning.
Automatic and Controlled Processing in the Corticocerebellar System.
Volume in Series.