for converting ionic signals into electronic ones thanks to the unique property of organic mixed ionic-electronic conductors (OMIECs). [4] Ionic concentration from an analyte or ionic currents from electroactive cells can be efficiently sensed/probed and amplified, thus making OECTs attractive sensors. [5] In the perspective of neuromorphic engineering, the same devices are capitalizing on the possibility to engineer devices where ion-electron coupling can be used to implement various synaptic plasticities, from short-term to long-term memory effects. [3,[6][7][8][9] These two aspects have been so far mostly developed independently from each other. In contrast, synapses in biology are combining sensing capabilities with plastic properties to provide some essential aspects of biocomputing. Through their adaptation properties, synapses are enhancing/depressing relevant/irrelevant signals from neurons. They also provide a rich set of non-linear operations to process the spike signals from neural cells. [10] As sensors, synapses are converting chemical signals from sensed neurotransmitters into transduced post-synaptic electric signals as ionic concentration modulation. Such ambivalence existing in biology is the natural example of a non-Von Neumann computing architecture that embeds highly complex biochemical sensing at all nodes in its network, and demonstrates reciprocally the power of the local adaptation of a sensing array that programs according to its environment.In this paper, we show how OECTs can combine these two important features for bio-signal sensing and processing. The corner stone of OECTs behavior is the transconductance, which couples ionic signals to electronic ones. [11] Transconductance can be well described by the coupling between: i) volumetric ionic capacitance allowing for a very large effective surface of interaction between the analyte and the polymer; and ii) efficient electronic transport along the π-conjugated organic chains. Several works have demonstrated routes for optimizing transconductance through either volumetric capacitance or electronic mobility tuning. [12,13] Notably, side-chain engineering on the conductive backbone of the polymer have been recently proposed as a promising chemical engineering route. [14] Here, we show how electropolymerization can be used to adapt post-fabrication of these two intrinsic parameters of OECTs (i.e., volumetric capacitance and electronic mobility) and how this technique Organic electrochemical transistors are considered today as a key technology to interact with a biological medium through their intrinsic ionic-electronic coupling. In this paper, the authors show how this coupling can be finely tuned (in operando) post-microfabrication via the electropolymerization technique. This strategy exploits the concept of adaptive sensing where both transconductance and impedance are tunable and can be modified on-demand to match different sensing requirements. Material investigation through Raman spectroscopy, atomic force microscopy, and scanning ele...