A combination of 5 Hz repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) over the left primary somatosensory cortex together with tactile coactivation applied to the right index-finger representation (coac + rTMS) boosted tactile discrimination ability tested on the right index-finger. Applying coactivation alone caused a 0.25 mm lowering in tactile discrimination thresholds. In contrast, after coac + rTMS we found a significant further improvement of discrimination thresholds in comparison to the coactivation-induced perceptual changes alone. We demonstrate that the individual further improvement after coac + rTMS depended on the effectiveness of the coactivation protocol when applied alone. Subjects, who showed little gain in tactile performance after coactivation alone, showed the largest improvement after coac + rTMS implying that the combined application was selective for poor learners. The selective effects of coac + rTMS are discussed in respect to N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor activation.