Cortical plasticity is the substrate for learning and memory. It is the basis of an organism’s ability to adapt in response to a changing environment and is central to functional recovery after an injury involving the nervous system. Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) has already been shown to be effective in altering neuroplasticity. Most VNS research has been conducted on epileptic animals and thus offers little information on how VNS may affect a healthy human brain. The final goal of this project is to establish a minimally invasive VNS protocol aiming to augment neuroplasticity and enhance behavioral performance in a cognitive task. Non-human primates are implanted with cortical electrodes and also receive a stimulating cuff electrode around the vagus nerve in the neck. By delivering current through the cuff, vagal evoked potentials (VEPs) are elicited on the cortex. In order to measure how VNS affects cortical excitability, we pair the stimulation of the vagus nerve with stimulation of a somatosensory nerve (i.e. median nerve) and we quantify the effects on the cortical activity by measuring the magnitude of the evoked responses generated on the cortex. Preliminary results from one animal showed a suppression of cortical activity in the primary motor area (M1) when the delay between the vagus stimulation and the median nerve stimulation ranges between 100 and 150 msec. Four additional animals have received vagus nerve cuffs and neural implants targeting multiple cortical areas. These neural implants give us access to recording not only from M1, but also from prefrontal, premotor, supplementary, and parietal cortical areas. In this way we will be able to characterize the physiological effects of VNS on the cortical excitability of different brain areas, generating data and insights never before obtained and directly applicable to the development of neuromodulation technology in humans.