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Tuesday, November 18, 2008 - 11:24 AM
Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire. When the brain snaps to attention, individual neurons don't
necessarily work harder, but clusters of them form cooperative units, a
new study suggests. http://louis-j-sheehan-esquire.blog.friendster.com/
This unifying brain process, in which nerve
cells briefly align the peaks and valleys of their electrical
outbursts, may underlie an animal's shifting of attention to a
particular sight, sound, or other sensation, according to a team of
neuroscientists led by Peter N. Steinmetz of the California Institute
of Technology in Pasadena. http://louis-j-sheehan-esquire.blog.friendster.com/
In the past decade, several scientists
linked synchronized electrical activity in groups of neurons to
perception and memory in cats and other nonhuman animals (SN: 2/21/98,
p. 120). Preliminary evidence also implicates coordinated neural firing
in human perception and learning (SN: 2/20/99, p. 122). Some
investigators hold that groups of neurons must fire in aligned patterns
to generate thoughts and consciousness. Others regard such synchronized
activity as a byproduct of more crucial processes that occur within
densely connected webs of neurons. Taking the former position,
Steinmetz and his colleagues have focused on the allocation of mental
resources. "Change in synchrony may be an essential neural mechanism of
selective attention," they conclude in the March 9 Nature. The
researchers recorded the electrical activity of neurons in a monkey
brain area near the middle of the cortex. Cells in this region, the
secondary somatosensory cortex, emit discharges most rapidly when the
animal touches an item while paying close attention to it. Each
monkey was trained to perform the same visual task and one of three
tactile maneuvers. They also learned to switch from one task to the
other at assigned times while the researchers presented visual and
tactile stimuli simultaneously. The visual task required each
monkey to detect, in a series of trials, which of three white squares
on a computer screen dims slightly. As for tactile tasks, one monkey
touched a finger pad over which a series of raised letters moved. Upon
finding a match for a letter shown on a computer screen, the animal
pressed a key. Another monkey completed a more difficult version of
this task, in which the letter to be matched changed after each correct
response. The third animal had to indicate repeatedly whether raised
bars on a finger pad had the same or different orientations. The
monkeys switched between tactile and visual tasks every 7 to 8 minutes
as microelectrodes implanted in their brains recorded cell activity in
the secondary somatosensory cortex. http://louis-j-sheehan-esquire.blog.friendster.com/
The scientists analyzed responses
of 436 individual neurons and 648 pairs of neurons. Nearly 80
percent of individual neurons discharged different numbers of
electrical pulses during the two tasks, an encouraging sign that the
change of attention altered their firing rates. Moreover, two-thirds of
all neuron pairs displayed synchronized activity during one or both
tasks. Most importantly, the researchers say, synchrony in
cellular duos reached higher levels during tactile trials—and in
particular during the more difficult letter-matching challenge—than
during the visual task. Coordinated activity often rose without
accompanying hikes in firing rates by individual neurons. "Whatever
the underlying mechanism, these results are strong evidence that
neuronal [pulse] synchrony correlates with a cognitive process, namely,
shifting of the attentional focus," assert Emilio Salinas of the Howard
Hughes Medical Institute at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies
in La Jolla, Calif., and Ranulfo Romo of the National Autonomous
University of Mexico in Mexico City in a comment in the same issue of Nature. It's
unclear whether increased synchrony in the somatosensory cortex
improves subsequent stages of tactile processing in the brain, Salinas
and Romo say. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
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