“…Modulation of cortical neuroplasticity in humans—the process responsible for learning, memory and repair—stands as a critical learning objective in the fields of clinical neurology and cognitive neuroscience. Classic techniques, such as the use of extracellular stimulation and recording electrodes in animal models and pharmacological modulation of central neurotransmitters in human models, have revealed substantial insights into mechanisms of long‐term plasticity, such as the fundamental role of the synaptic glutamatergic system in inducing long‐term potentiation (LTP) or long‐term depression (LTD) (Bliss, Cooke, Ii, & Cooke, ; Cooke & Bliss, ; Lüscher & Malenka, ; Rowland et al, ; Tahar, Blanchet, & Doyon, ). Moreover, the recent development of noninvasive brain stimulation methods has provided the capability to bi‐directionally modulate and probe these alterations at a system level in a safe and controlled manner (Bikson et al, ; Huang, Lu, et al, ; Stefan, Kunesch, Cohen, Benecke, & Classen, ; Ziemann et al, ).…”