<p>Part 1: Cellular and molecular aspects of synaptic tagging and capture</p><p>Chapter 1: Differential role of CaMK in synaptic tagging and capture<br>Roger L Redondo, Richard GM Morris</p><p>Chapter 2: Compartmentalization of Synaptic Tagging and Capture<br>Juan Marcos Alarcon</p><p>Chapter 3: Synaptic cooperation and competition: two sides of the same coin?<br>Rosalina Fonseca</p><p>Chapter 4: Neuropsin-dependent and -independent synaptic tagging and modulation of long-term potentiation: a quest for the associated signaling pathway(s)<br>Yasuyuki Ishikawa, Sadao Shiosaka</p><p>Chapter 5: PKA Anchoring and Synaptic Tagging and Capture<br>Ted Abel, Alan Jung Park</p><p>Chapter 6: Activity-dependent protein transport as a synaptic tag<br>Daisuke Okada, Kaoru Inokuchi</p><p>Chapter 7: mTOR and the Regulation of Translational Capacity in Late Forms of Synaptic Plasticity<br>Panayiotis Tsokas, Robert D. Blitzer</p><p>Chapter 8: Dopaminergic Neuromodulation in Synaptic tagging and Capture<br>Sheeja Navakkode </p><p>Chapter 9: From where? Synaptic Tagging Allows the Nucleus Not to Care<br>Shannon Farris, Serena M. Dudek</p><p><br>Part 2: Behavioral and Metaplastic aspects of synaptic tagging and capture</p><p>Chapter 10: BDNF and TrkB mediated signalling supports processes of metaplasticity and long-term memory formation<br>Martin Korte</p><p>Chapter 11: Prescient Synapses: Gating Future Neuronal Consciousness Through Synaptic Tagging and Metaplasticity<br>Steven A. Connor, Peter V. Nguyen</p><p>Chapter 12: Metaplasticity of Synaptic tagging and Capture: Memory beyond the circle<br>Mahima Sharma, Sreedharan Sajikumar</p><p>Chapter 13: Emotional tagging and long-term memory formation<br>Gal Richter-Levin, Orli Kehat, Rachel Anunu</p><p>Chapter 14: The Behavioral Tagging hypothesis and its implications for long-term memory formation<br>Diego Moncada, Fabrico Ballarini, María Cecilia Martinez, Haydée Viola</p>