Thursday, November 24, 2011
Optogenetics - Studying the Nervous System
Friday, November 18, 2011
How good are our brains on weighing value?
LIP neurons respond to a specific visual receptive field, but also encorporate the surrounding context and previous saccades. So, individual parietal neurons need the response of neighboring neurons to contextualize the saccade movement. Additionally, inhibition by the receptive field neurons not being used enhances the strength and response of the receptive field neurons which are active, similar to that of general visual processing giving value and different weights. What was interesting is that as the number of alternative distractors in neighboring visual fields increased the value firing in the LIP neurons was not as strong.
The talk was quite fascinating as it encorporated both physiological and cognitive elements. My curiosity was to that of dislexia. If this applied to visual stimuli in general, perhaps there is some problems in LIP neurons of those with dislexia.
For anyone who's interested, I'm posting a link to his original research. It was tough to get through, but quite interesting.
http://www.jneurosci.org.flagship.luc.edu/content/31/29/10627.full.pdf
Thursday, November 17, 2011
Can Facebook Friends Increase Brain Regions?
The next time your parents tell you to, “Get off Facebook!” at the dinner table, you will have a more neuroscientifically plausible response, “I’m working on expanding the amount of grey matter in my right entorhinal cortex!” … or not?
Facebook has become the epicenter of social networking. With more than 800 million active users worldwide, “friending” an old classmate from preschool and swapping pictures seems quicker, easier, and more interactive than planning out a reunion only to find yourself once again going your separate ways at the end of the night.
Reuters has published a bold new article titled, “More Facebook friends linked to bigger brain areas.” The article goes on to propose that the number of online friends a person has may affect the size of certain regions of the brain. The focus of this article is whether the internet will change the structure of the human brain over time. Ryota Kanai, a researcher from the University College London, and colleagues used MRI to examine the brains of students. In their study they used 125 students who were active Facebook users. They went on to cross – check their data with 40 other students later on. In their research they found that the amount of friends a person had on Facebook strongly suggested a connection with the grey matter of four regions in the brain: the amygdala, the right superior temporal sulcus, the right entorhinal cortex, and the left middle temporal gyrus.
However, they also found that the thickness of the grey matter when it came to the amygdala was also related to “real – world” friends. Although, the other three brain regions were linked to the “online” friendships. Typically the students in their research varied in the number of friends each one had from roughly 300 to upwards of 1,000.
There is still more research to be done in relation to social networking and the brain and with all of this research it is still not clear whether a person is “hard – wired” to be more social. Heidi Johansen Berg, a researcher not involved in the study from the University of Oxford, said, “If you got yourself 100 new Facebook friends today then your brain would not be bigger tomorrow.”
Despite the controversy and the on-going dilemma of the goodness or evil of modern – day technology, it is good to know that perhaps we can begin to be a little more “guilt – free” while expanding our friend circles on Facebook!
Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/10/19/uk-science-facebook-idUSLNE79I02020111019