“…Other reactivations with greater changes in the receptive field locations of central neurons occurred over hours to weeks, such as the reactivation of cortical neurons previously activated from the glabrous skin of the hand by touch on the back of the hand after sectioning of the median nerve to the glabrous skin of digits 1–3 (Merzenich et al, 1983a,b). Such rapid reactivations may largely result from the potentiation of previously existing subthreshold inputs, especially in the cuneate nucleus representing the hand in the lower brainstem, by homeostatic mechanisms (Garraghty et al, 1991; Turrigiano, 1999; Wellman et al, 2002), and possibly by new axon growth over short distances (Darian-Smith and Gilbert, 1994; Jain et al, 2000; Darian-Smith, 2004; Hickmott and Steen, 2005; Cheetham et al, 2008; Yamahachi et al, 2009; Marik et al, 2010, 2014). Other reactivations that follow the loss or denervation of the forelimb, including invasion by inputs from the face (Pons et al, 1991; Jain et al, 1997, 2000; Wu and Kaas, 1999; Florence et al, 2000), may take many months to emerge (Jain et al, 1997), and depend on longer distances of new axon growth at subcortical and cortical levels (Florence et al, 1998; Jain et al, 2000).…”