NEURO: Good Thinking = Good Timing?

From: J. R. Molloy (jr@shasta.com)
Date: Sat Nov 10 2001 - 08:55:24 MST


Brain may forge some memories in waves
http://www.sciencenews.org/20011110/fob6.asp

Although people effortlessly remember all sorts of everyday events, scientists
are struggling to explain how the brain makes this possible. In two critical
brain areas, such memory may hinge more on the timing than on the strength of
neural activity, according to a team of neuroscientists.

As volunteers study word lists, clusters of neurons in the rhinal cortex and
the hippocampus-adjacent brain areas already implicated in memory-fire
synchronized electrical bursts that pave the way for remembering those words
later, argue Jürgen Fell of the University of Bonn in Germany and his
colleagues.

Moreover, the coordination of cell activity in the same two brain regions
plummets for a fraction of a second just after participants remember a word
from the list, possibly signaling an end to a coordinated neural effort,
Fell's team proposes in an article slated to appear in Nature Neuroscience.

"These are enticing data," says neuroscientist Anthony D. Wagner of the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "Memory may emerge when rhinal and
hippocampal neurons synchronously oscillate and then desynchronize."

Some scientists theorize that synchronized neural firing, which generates
brain waves, lies at the root of perception and memory (SN: 2/20/99, p. 122).
Attention has focused on gamma waves, which are the result of thousands of
neurons emitting equivalent electrical pulses about 40 times a second.

Fell's group studied gamma waves in nine epileptic adults in whom surgeons had
temporarily implanted electrodes to find seizure sites. None had suffered a
seizure for at least 1 day. In the investigation, the volunteers studied a
word list, performed a brief distracting task, and then tried to recall words
from the list.

About one-quarter second and again one-half second after viewing words that
they would later remember, participants displayed bursts of gamma activity in
the rhinal cortex and the hippocampus. One second after they recalled a word
from the studied list, synchronized neural firing declined sharply for a
fraction of a second.

No distinctive type of gamma activity occurred while participants viewed words
that they later failed to recall or when they tried to recall a word in vain.

It's unclear how the waxing and waning of gamma activity in the rhinal cortex
and the hippocampus boosts memory, the researchers note. Preliminary evidence
suggests that gamma waves in the hippocampus render cells more capable of
receiving incoming messages, they say.

The origins of synchronized firing in the rhinal cortex and the hippocampus
are also unknown, Wagner remarks. Another brain area, the prefrontal cortex,
may regulate memory-related gamma activity elsewhere, in his view.

Another open question concerns the type of memory fostered by rhinal
cortex-hippocampus cooperation. Fell's team examined conscious recall, which
has often been attributed to the hippocampus. In contrast, many
neuroscientists suspect that the rhinal cortex supports a sense of familiarity
that falls short of conscious recall of previously encountered information.

--- --- --- --- ---

Useless hypotheses, etc.:
 consciousness, phlogiston, philosophy, vitalism, mind, free will, qualia,
analog computing, cultural relativism, GAC, Cyc, Eliza, cryonics, individual
uniqueness, ego, human values, scientific relinquishment, malevolent AI,
non-sensory experience

We move into a better future in proportion as science displaces superstition.



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