Cerebral plasticity is perhaps the most fundamental
principle of neuropsychology that is invoked, measured,
analyzed, and targeted for treatment and experimental intervention
each day by clinicians and scientists. Whether the focus
is central nervous system development, recovery from brain
damage, or age-associated changes and diseases, understanding
cerebral plasticity is vital to scientific and clinical
advances in human brain function and treatment of neurologic
disorders in millions of people. Some of these advances
have been succinctly summarized in two recent volumes.
The first (McGaugh et al.) is a handsomely bound summary
of basic research investigating brain mechanisms underlying
learning and memory. The text resulted from a symposium
featuring largely American and Mexican investigators who
addressed cellular aspects of memory and how brain systems
may mediate different types of memory. As John Garcia emphasizes
in the opening chapter, such investigation is driven by
the need to interrelate behavior and brain processes, bridging
the barranca or chasm between behavioral and brain
research. The fundamental role of learning and memory to
behavior of all varieties, and the widespread involvement
of cortical, limbic, basal ganglia, diencephalic, brain
stem, and cerebellar structures in memory provides the
massive playing field on which the ensuing behavioral,
electrophysiologic, neurochemical, and molecular studies
are described.