The results obtained so far in this project demonstrate that we have successfully pushed the boundaries of the existing state of the art technologies. We have implemented a novel combination of techniques that allowed us to conquer a previously unexplored area of neuroscience. The combination of our newly-designed light-regulated drugs (optopharmacological tools) with the most advance light imaging techniques (2-photon and confocal microscopy) and their application as therapeutic mapping and physiological control of neural tissue, neurons and synapses, represent a clear progress in the development of innovative technologies towards the achievement of future phototherapies for neurological disorders. Our results show that we can control neuronal activity using photoswitches that target different specific subtypes of glutamate receptors. Some of these receptors are essential for the normal physiology of neural circuits (AMPAR, KAR), while some others are modulatory receptors implicated in neurological diseases (mGluR). These results, therefore, have important implications for the development of preclinical studies for phototherapies for these brain diseases, including autism spectrum disorders. Furthermore, we demonstrate that we can regulate neuronal activity and plasticity at multiple levels of resolution in the brain: from the macroscopic level of a whole brain in an intact organism (Fig 1A-B), to the mesoscopic level of single neurons (Fig 1C-D), down the microscopic level of single synapses (Fig 1E-H), which is the minimum and essential basis of neuronal transmission. These experiments are technically demanding and, to successfully obtain the results, we had to overcome the existing limits of several technologies. Therefore, there is no doubt these results will have an imminent impact in the scientific community, i.e. with a potential high number of citations. It will also have a mid-term high impact in the medical field, as this is the first preclinical data of the application of these optopharmacological tools for autism spectrum disorders. It will also have a mid-term impact on the industry as some commercial applications of similar drugs are already on the way from our lab (i.e. there is the clear possibility to patent these new drugs as well as the therapeutic mapping technique itself). Finally, these results will definitely have a clear impact on the society. Optopharmacology is still a largely unknown technology for non-scientific lay people. The dissemination of these results and the introduction of this new technology to the general audience, therefore, is sure to create a great social impact. Thus, our current efforts to disseminate these results will undoubtedly payoff for the achievement of our scientific goals, as it will attract the attention of members of the scientific, commercial, medical and cultural communities.