Abstract

In the young C57Bl6 mouse, the hyperexcitability phase (`pop-corn' stage) which normally occurs around the 16–18th postnatal day and lasts 3–6 days, was greatly shortened by an intensive sensorimotor training when the `pop-corn' stage appeared. It was prevented when the animals were trained for 4 days before it appeared. This might suggest, at least in part, that an early short duration sensorimotor training increased the rate of maturation of the inhibitory systems that sustain the development of the motor behavior.

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